Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Randomini Tool
When one or more art objects are selected and the Randomini tool is in use, its widget will appear, initially centered over the bounds of the selected art (it may later be repositioned; see below). By using the cursor to click or drag parts of the widget, the artwork can be edited. Except for Hue, all changes are previewed using outlines and are not actually applied to the art until the Apply button is clicked or the Enter
key is pressed. Therefore, if you change your mind and decide not to randomize the art, simply switch to another tool and the art will remain as it was. All parameters are retained between uses of the tool. When not over a widget control, the cursor for the Randomini tool has the shape of a die showing various random faces. When nothing is selected, the Randomini tool can be dragged to marquee-select
artwork.
Randomino annotation widget
Dragging the rotation control changes the angle up to which each piece of art will be randomly rotated around its bounding box center, in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. For example, setting the rotation arm at a 24° angle will cause the preview art to be rotated anywhere from -24° to 24°:
Randomino rotation arm preview
The rotation control may be double-clicked
to set the rotation value numerically. Holding down the Shift
key when dragging the control causes it to be constrained to steps of 10°. Holding down Command/Ctrl
while dragging it enables “Slow-Drag,” which moves the control as if all cursor movements were reduced tenfold, allowing for fine-tuning.
Dragging the scale thumb changes the value up to which each piece of art will be randomly scaled from its bounding box center. For example, setting the scale value to 150% will cause the preview art to be scaled anywhere from 100% to 150%:
Randomini scaling control arm
The scale thumb may be double-clicked
to set the scale value numerically. Holding down Shift
while dragging the thumb causes the scale values to be constrained to integer values. Holding down Command/Ctrl
enables “Slow-Drag”, as per the Rotation control.
Dragging the offset thumb changes the value up to which each piece of art will be randomly offset (shifted in position). For example, setting the offset value to 6pt will cause the preview art to be moved anywhere from 0 to 6 points. The offset direction is randomly chosen.
Randomini offset slider annotation
As with the scale thumb, the offset thumb may be doubleclicked
to set the value numerically, Shift-dragged
to constrain the value, or Command/Ctrl-dragged
to enable “Slow-Drag.”
Clicking the Apply button applies the currently displayed random rotation, scaling and offset to the selected art, as previewed. Immediately afterwards, since the art is still selected, new random parameters will be selected and previewed, allowing you to quickly apply multiple randomizations. To automatically deselect the art after applying the randomization, hold down Shift
while clicking the Apply button. Pressing the Enter
key has the same effect as clicking the Apply button unless no art is selected, in which case it opens the tool preferences dialog.
Clicking the Hue button immediately randomizes the hues (strokes and fills) of the selected art. Note that black (which has zero brightness) and white (which has maximum brightness) are not affected by changing the hue. Also note that grouped objects are only affected if they have a stroke or fill applied in the Appearance panel at the group level, unless the “Ignore Grouping” preference is enabled (see Randomini: Preferences). Type objects are only affected if they have a stroke or fill applied in the Appearance panel above the Characters; to change the color of individual characters, use the Randomino panel.
The center control may be dragged to reposition the entire widget. Doubleclicking
the center control resets all parameters to their default values (i.e., no rotation, no scaling, and no offset).
Illustrator Location:
Illustrator Main Menu > Window > Astute Graphics > Randomino
Rotates the selected artwork in a random way. Note that each rotation value is applied to the artwork in its current orientation; it does not set an absolute amount of rotation (as only certain objects in Illustrator have absolute rotations).
Randomino Panel Rotation Callouts
Determines whether the reference point (the point about which the rotation will occur) is relative to the position of the art, or at an absolute position.
Selects what the reference point is relative to: the art’s bounds; the art’s first anchor point (for paths only); the art’s last anchor point (for paths only); or the artboard.
Randomino Rotated Lines
For Art Bounds and Artboard relative reference points, specifies the position of the reference point (top left, top, top right, middle left, etc).
The X and Y coordinates of the reference point.
Enables a tool that allows you to click at the reference point’s position.
Rotation can be applied to only certain attributes of the selected art. You can choose to rotate the art objects themselves, any patterns found within the art, or any gradients found within the art.
Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Selection Stack > Rotate at Collisions Tool
As the Rotate At Collision tool has several keypresses which can add or change its functionality, we strongly suggest installing the free Astute Graphics plugin Astute Buddy, which creates a panel that dynamically updates to inform you of the various keys which can be pressed in the tool’s current context.
Clicking
The Rotate At Collision tool can be used to click-select the two types of object that it operates on: paths and point text objects. Paths must be clicked at an anchor point or along a segment (not on their fills) and point text objects must be clicked on their baselines. In both cases the Rotate At Collision cursor will snap when hovering to eligible spots and display a red ring with informational text. Shift-clicking
will deselect an already-selected object. Clicking on an empty area of the canvas will deselect everything.
Dragging
If the Rotate At Collision tool starts a drag from anywhere except over a path or point text object, it simply acts as a selection tool which creates a marquee for selecting objects. The tool preference Fully Select Groups and Compound Paths controls whether it acts like the Selection tool or the Direct Selection tool, and by holding down Option/Alt
while dragging, you can temporarily invert the setting on the fly. To toggle the setting and affect future marquee operations as well, press the V
key.
When the drag starts over a path or point text object, the object (and any other selected artwork) is dragged with the cursor, snapping when it “collides” with other paths on the artboard. The snap tolerance is 12 pixels by default but can be changed (see Rotate At Collision: Preferences). When a snap occurs, the dragged path or point text object, along with any other selected artwork, is rotated around the collision point in one of two ways. If an open path was dragged by one of its endpoints, then the path is rotated to be perpendicular (at the dragged endpoint) to the stationary path. Otherwise, the path or point text object is made tangent to the stationary path.
Rotate at Collisions Tool Path Example
When calculating the tangent angle of a path at a sharp corner point, the angle of the path going into the point and the angle of the path coming out of the point are averaged together, so a dragged path will be perpendicular to the imaginary line that bisects the angle:
Rotate at Collisions Tool Sharp Point Example
Because the tangent angle depends on path direction (clockwise vs. counter-clockwise), some paths may orient themselves on the opposite side from what is desired. In this case, pressing Space
will toggle between the “normal” orientation and the alternate orientation:
Rotate at Collisions Tool Alternate Orientation
Pressing one or more modifier keys while dragging artwork changes or adds tool functionality:
Shift: Constrains the motion of the dragged artwork to increments of 45° around the constrain angle.
Option/Alt: Duplicates the dragged artwork instead of moving it.
Command/Ctrl: Overrides snapping to anchor points and straight midpoints along the stationary paths.
The following non-modifier keys can be pressed while dragging artwork to toggle or change various tool preferences on the fly (i.e., without having to go to the Rotate At Collision Preferences dialog):
Space: Toggles between normal orientation and alternate orientation (see above).
Up/Down Arrows: When the Use Collision Spacing preference is active, increases or decreases the spacing value by the native Keyboard Increment amount (see Rotate At Collision: Preferences).
A: Toggles the Add Points to Paths at Collisions preference.
L: Toggles the Snap To Locked Paths preference.
S: Toggles the Use Collision Spacing preference.
Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Selection Stack > Rotate to Collisions Tool
As the Rotate To Collision tool has several keypresses which can add or change its functionality, we strongly suggest installing the free Astute Graphics plugin Astute Buddy, which creates a panel that dynamically updates to inform you of the various keys which can be pressed in the tool’s current context.
Clicking
Clicking with the Rotate To Collision tool relocates the rotation center point, indicated by a small red crosshair. This can be done whether or not artwork is selected (however, if artwork is not selected, then selecting it to actually rotate it may result in the rotation center point automatically moving if the preference Reset Rotation Center On New Selection is enabled (see Rotate To Collision: Preferences).
Doubleclicking
Doubleclicking
on the rotation center point crosshair icon allows you to set its position numerically:
Rotate to Collisions Tool - Rotation Center Dialog
Dragging
If no artwork is selected, dragging with the Rotate To Collision tool simply relocates the rotation center point. Otherwise, all the selected art objects are rotated around the rotation center point in a manner similar to the native Rotation tool, except that they will snap to positions where paths in the selection “collide” with other paths, either at corner points or at places where the paths share a tangency. Small magenta dots will be drawn at spots where the tool has detected points of collision. The snap tolerance is 12 pixels by default but can be changed (see Rotate To Collision: Preferences).
Rotate to Collisions Tool Example
Pressing one or more modifier keys while dragging artwork changes or adds tool functionality:
Shift: Constrains the rotation of the dragged artwork to increments of 45°. Since this takes precedence over the snapping behavior, it is provided for convenience only, since the same operation could be accomplished with the native Rotation tool.
Option/Alt: Duplicates the dragged artwork instead of moving it.
Command/Ctrl: Overrides collision snapping. This is provided for convenience only, since the same operation could be accomplished with the native Rotation tool.
The following non-modifier keys can be pressed while rotating artwork to toggle or change various tool preferences on the fly (i.e., without having to go to the Rotate To Collision Preferences dialog):
Up/Down Arrows: When the Use Collision Spacing preference is active, increases or decreases the spacing value by the native Keyboard Increment amount.
A: Toggles the Add Points to Paths at Collisions preference.
L: Toggles the Snap To Locked Paths preference.
S: Toggles the Use Collision Spacing preference.
X: Toggles the Snap To Pre-Drag Path Positions preference.
Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Orient Tool
The Orient tool works by first drawing a reference line, and then rotating one end of the reference line to the desired angle; any selected artwork will be rotated by the same amount.
To create the reference line, either click once at the start point and once at the end, or click and drag in one step. Even when Smart Guides are turned off, the cursor will snap to anchor points, image corners, and the ends of text baselines with a snapping ring. The reference line shows a small circle (red in color, by default) at its start and end.
Orient Tool Setting Reference Line
After the reference line is set, clicking-and-dragging on either of its ends will rotate both the line and any selected art objects. By holding down Shift
, the angle of the line can be constrained to 45° increments around the general constrain angle.
Orient Tool Rotating Art
Typically the reference line is made against the selected art, but this is not required. For example, to rotate selected horizontal artwork to be parallel to an angled straight path, one method would be to create the reference line horizontally starting from one end of the path and then (with Smart Guides enabled) rotate it until its endpoint snaps to the path.
Orient Tool Rotating Art Example
If the Option/Alt
key is pressed while the reference line is being rotated, the selected art will be duplicated into the new rotated position.
The reference line is retained until a new start point is clicked, or the Orient tool is deselected. Thus the selection can be changed without losing the current reference line position by temporarily switching to a selection tool by pressing Command/Ctrl
.
Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Orient Stack > Quick Orient Tool
The Quick Orient tool can be used in two ways: by simply clicking on art objects, or by drag-marqueeing
over them. The artwork does not need to be selected. In either case, the default method for determining how much to rotate an object to “straighten” it is by looking at the rotation of the bounding box that Illustrator stores for each piece of art.
Quick Orient Tool Example
Therefore, if the art’s bounding box becomes reset (for example, by choosing Object > Transform > Reset Bounding Box
), Quick Orient will not be able to automatically straighten the object except for certain types of art such as raster images, which keep rotation data in an additional location.
Quick Orient Rotated Bounding Box Example
However, for paths, Quick Orient can also use a path segment to rotate the path. To do this, hover the tool over a path segment and press the Option/Alt
key. The path will be rotated such that the segment’s endpoints are horizontal (taking into account the general constrain angle), with the imaginary point halfway between the two endpoints acting as the center of rotation.
Quick Orient to Segment Example
Because the tool’s automatic orientation may not necessarily be the desired one, after clicking (and with the mouse button still down), the Space
bar may be pressed to rotate the art repeatedly in 45° steps.
Quick Orient - Reorient Example
By default the Quick Orient tool acts on members of groups independently, but by holding Shift
, all members of the top-most group to which the art under the cursor belongs (if any) will be rotated together.
Quick Orient Whole Group Together
To orient multiple art objects in one step, drag a marquee over them:
Quick Orient Marqueeing Example
The Quick Orient tool has no preferences. The color of the annotation used to preview the oriented artwork is taken from the Orient tool’s preference.
Illustrator Location:
Advanced Toolbar > Orient Stack > Orient Transform Tool
As the Orient Transform tool has several keypresses which can add or change its functionality, we suggest installing the free Astute Graphics plugin Astute Buddy, which creates a panel that dynamically updates to inform you of the various keys which can be pressed in the tool’s current context.
To use the Orient Transform tool, two reference lines must be drawn: a source line and a destination line. This can be done by using one of two methods: by clicking once on each endpoint, or by clicking and dragging. The former method has the advantage of allowing you to scroll, zoom, change the view mode, etc. in the middle of the operation. However, to use several shortcut keypresses (detailed below), you must continue to hold the mouse button down after the second click used to define the second reference line.
Reference lines are annotated with small circles (red, by default) at each end; the source line is solid while the destination line is dotted. The cursor will snap to anchor points, raster image corners, and the ends of point text baselines even when Smart Guides are turned off.
Orient Transform Tool Example
While the destination reference line is being drawn, all selected art objects will be previewed in red in the new position and size they would have after being linearly transformed such that the source reference line would be mapped onto the destination reference line. Releasing the mouse button after drawing the destination reference line finalizes the transformation. If Option/Alt
is held down, the art is duplicated to its new position rather than being moved. Holding down the Shift
key constrains either reference line to 45° increments around the general constrain angle.
If the destination reference line is being drawn by dragging, or if the mouse button is held down after the second click, several additional keypresses may be used to add or change functionality. As with all Astute tool keypresses, these will be indicated on the Astute Buddy panel.
Space: Flips the orientation of the transformed art, as if the destination reference line had been drawn in the opposite direction. This is faster than actually redrawing the line.
Orient Transform Flipped Orientation
A: Toggles mirroring. When mirroring is enabled, after being transformed, the artwork is additionally reflected across the destination reference line, which is drawn with a more widely-spaced dotted line.
Mirroring mode is retained across uses of the tool.
Orient Transform Mirrored Orientation
D: Toggles persistent duplicate, so the Option/Alt
key does not need to be held down to duplicate art. This can be useful when using the tool to make many successive copies of an art object. The mode is retained across uses of the tool.
R: Toggles “retain selection” mode. Normally, after duplication, the selection is switched to the new transformed duplicate (and the source reference line is moved to the position of the destination reference line). However, when retain selection mode is enabled, the original art remains selected and the source reference line remains in its original position. Retain selection mode is always disabled to start.
S: Toggles size locking mode. When the size is locked, only the position and angle of the selected artwork will be modified.
Orient Transform Size Locking
The Orient Transform tool honors the general preference Scale Stroke & Effects.