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Image Frames

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    Professor Vaughn: Moving on with other,
    types of frames, including image frames.
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    So, we looked at using the type tool
    to draw our frame, now we're going to use
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    our rectangle or other frames which is
    right here to draw some
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    areas for some images.
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    So, this looks a lot like our standard
    rectangle, but it isn't, notice here we've
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    got this X going through the rectangle?
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    That's a frame.
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    Whereas here, which is a regular
    rectangle tool,
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    it acts like a shape.
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    Underneath the rectangle frame tool,
    you have a circular version or
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    a polygon version, all of those are
    great.
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    Remember frames are going to be used
    to sort-of contain the area of the image,
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    it's almost like, um, a picture frame.
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    So, let's just start with the rectangle
    frame and I am simply going to
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    draw out an area where I want my image
    to go; I just click and drag, there it is,
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    there's the frame, big X in the
    middle.
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    Now again, this is different than a
    rectangle.
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    I'm going to use this as a place holder
    for now, or place my image
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    if I'm ready to go.
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    Often, you can create a design where you
    lay it out without any of your information
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    yet, maybe you send it to a photographer,
    they fill in the images, vice versa.
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    Okay, so, let's go ahead and place a
    graphic; a couple ways to do this, its
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    going to go inside this frame, so if
    you've clicked off for some reason,
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    you can click back on it, make sure you've
    got it selected with your selection tool,
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    you can use the quick action down here
    called import file or file, place.
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    These are the same--will get you to the same
    place.
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    Okay, so file, place, you're going to
    navigate to where your image might be,
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    I've got some images ready to go in this
    Lorax folder and I'm just going to grab
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    one of them; this little Lorax,
    here we go, open.
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    Now, important to note, images are always
    placed at 100% of their size, so if you're
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    working with photographs you need to
    make sure you're working in photoshop,
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    editing it correctly, sizing it to the
    correct size and resolution before
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    putting it into InDesign.
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    So, you can see this file actually is a
    little bit smaller than my frame but,
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    that's okay, I can always adjust my frame
    using my selection tool, so I can
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    drag it in from the top to the bottom,
    or if you want to do that a little bit
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    quicker, so there's no space around it,
    you can use frame fitting down here.
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    So, there's some really good opportunities
    here.
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    You can fill your frame proportionally,
    now this is an interesting one where
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    it does make it feel like it sized it,
    but again, if your image is low quality
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    you might notice some degradation,
    so it basically filled it out
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    proportionally, so not skewing it,
    but you do loose some of your image.
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    We have fit content proportionally,
    so that will fit it towards the
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    top and bottom edge, but it's not actually
    skewing it.
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    Then we have some fit content to frame,
    watch what happens, this is stretching it
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    so, I don't really recommend that.
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    Same idea, uh, actually this fourth one is
    a really good one where this one makes
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    your frame go down to size of your actual
    image and then this autofit sometimes
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    can also be really useful, this is going
    to, um,
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    autofit your frame and your content
    together, so those can be good.
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    But let's divide into what's happening in
    this actual image.
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    Now, we've got our frame, this is the
    bounding box, I can see all eight
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    of those editing boxes, I can move my
    frame in, notice I'm not moving the image
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    I'm moving the frame because I've got the
    frame with that blue box,
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    so all I'm doing is adjusting the frame,
    image is staying the same,
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    the frame kind-of acts like a cropping
    mechanism in this case, so that's useful.
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    I can, of course, make a skewed frame by
    using my direct selection tool.
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    I can also, think about how to work with
    the actual image.
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    Now, so far, I've only been using the
    frame.
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    The image itself, if you hover over notice
    in this middle zone, you get what's called
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    content grabber, click here, just once,
    now, we have a new colorful edge,
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    this is like this orange kind-of golden
    color, right?
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    You see that?
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    So, that is the image, not the frame,
    the moment you enter the content
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    grabber, you're working with the image.
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    If I move, notice I'm moving the image,
    you can see the orange bounding box,
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    I've just shifted this whole image over,
    which is getting it really misaligned
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    to my frame, so be really careful,
    now look, my frame is in the same spot,
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    but my image is way over.
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    If you want to size up or down, scaling,
    your actual image, not the frame,
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    this is where you go, you need to be on
    the orange bounding box.
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    Now, holding shift is important depending
    on your version that keeps it proportional
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    so you're not skewing your image and then
    come into the image and get it aligned
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    with your frame in the way that you want
    it to be aligned.
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    Now again, let's do this one more time.
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    I'm going to go ahead and just click off,
    click anywhere else.
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    Normal, image, frame, blue,
    blue bounding box, the moment I enter the
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    content grabber right here in the middle,
    orange bounding box, that orange bounding
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    box is how I can scale up or down,
    I can move the image
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    let to right, excreta.
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    If you are attempting--now I've got things
    real crazy here--if you are attempting
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    to move them both at the same time,
    if you just grab your actual frame,
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    you should be able to carry them together.
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    If you want to scale them together at the
    same time--oops command-Z--shift and
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    command are what you need to do,
    so I'm going to back myself up.
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    So, notice I just got the blue bounding
    box, I'm going to hold down shift and
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    command, that tells InDesign 'resize the
    frame and resize the content',
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    shift and command, they're both getting
    smaller in the same proportion.
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    Okay, so that is our basics of working
    with images.
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    I'm going to delete this, now I'm going
    to draw a couple other frames,
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    let's do something more interesting,
    let's do a polygon.
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    Remember if you hold shift you're
    going to keep things proportional.
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    Polygon, I know it's a frame, it has the
    X.
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    Let's try the import file.
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    Import file, find your file, say open,
    now its placed it in there, now again,
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    its not quite right as far as the sizing
    goes, so do I need to edit
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    the size of the frame?
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    I can use the selection tool,
    editing the size of the frame,
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    making it fit a little bit better to my
    content, scaling it down, now I have a
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    frame that's constraining my image
    to this particular shape.
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    If I need to edit the image itself,
    click on the content grabber, now I see
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    the orange frame and I know this is the
    image scaling it up or down, left or right.
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    Okay, other ways of working.
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    You can always draw out your design first,
    knowing perhaps that you want a big image,
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    draw it out, maybe you want one smaller
    image, put it right here, and perhaps you
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    want some text, you could just draw some
    text right there and maybe fill it with
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    some dummy text down here so you can
    start to build your design.
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    If you want to place more than one image
    at a time, we can do that.
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    I'm going to go back here, I'm going do
    do file, place, and let's say I absolutely
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    know I want this one and the one beneath
    it, I'm going to hold the shift key,
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    I've grabbed two files and say open,
    now look what's happened to my cursor,
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    it is preloaded with my two files, it has
    an icon that says number two, if you
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    use your arrow on your keyboard you can
    scroll through to get a preview of which
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    one you're starting with.
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    I want to start with this one and I'm
    going to place it here, now its preloaded
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    my second one and I'm going to place it
    in this frame.
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    Now, this one of course, was not quite
    the right size, so maybe I want to do
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    some frame fitting, I can fill the
    frame proportionally, here it looks like
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    I'm not quite there either with the actual
    image size, I'm going to leave it for now
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    just to keep it simple, but that's a way
    where you can load multiple images
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    into your cursor and then place them on
    fly really quickly.
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    So, practice placing your images,
    also called importing, drawing out your
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    image frames and understanding how to
    edit them with the content grabber
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    and the bounding box.
Title:
Image Frames
Video Language:
English
Duration:
09:30
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odscaptioning edited English subtitles for Image Frames
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