Sometimes you need to go a little bit wild with your typography. In these cases, you can either take the easy way and choose a fancy font from some of the free font site like Dafont or Urban Fonts, or get creative and give some extra sparkle to your ordinary font, creating a typographic design which can stand by itself. This tutorial, discusses this later option. Beware of the following boolean operations galore!
How to Add Decorative Glamour to Your Ordinary Script Font
Jul 28th in Text Effects by Ferenc SzelesFinal Image Preview
Below is the final image we will be working towards, as well as a few color variations. Want access to the full Vector Source files and downloadable copies of every tutorial, including this one? Join Vector Plus for just 9$ a month.
For this tutorial, I used CorelDRAW but the techniques discussed apply for most vector editing software.


Step 1 - Type, Organize, and Choose the Font
Find the relationships in your copy and organize the text accordingly. For this tutorial, I've chosen a calligraphic font called Old Script from dafont.com, but any script font will do.

Step 2 - Convert to Curves and Break Apart
To modify the font we will need curves. Select your text and press Command + Q (convert to curves) and then press Command + K or use the Break Apart icon form the Property Bar, to break apart the components of the font. Since inner parts are separate elements we need to trim them from the rest of the character.

Step 3 - Trim Inner Parts
Shift-select the inner (I've altered their color to orange) and the outer parts of a character and press trim on the Property Bar. If you want to have more control over boolean operations, then you can turn on the Shaping docker from the Window menu. Then select the source object, press Trim, and select the target object with the special cursor.
Sometimes after the break apart operation the inner parts go behind the outer parts. In this case, select the outer part and press Shift + Page Down to send it to the back. It is always a good idea to have two different colors for boolean operations.

Step 4 - Give Some Flesh to the Characters
Select an individual letter and drag away. Before releasing your button, click with the right button and you will get a copy of the original shape. Repeat the copy operation, but this time move the copy to the left a little bit to have two overlapping shapes.

Step 5 - Trim and Break
Select the two overlapping copies and click the Trim icon on the toolbar. Select the resulting shape and press Command + K to break apart.

Step 6 - Weld
Move away some of the resulting shapes to the right and weld the rest. The goal is to achieve a more dynamic look by increasing the difference between the thick and thin parts of the character. I find steps 4-6 the easiest way, but you can use any other techniques to achieve the desired alteration.

Step 7 - Clean Up Messy Curves
Remove unneeded nodes to have a clean flowing curve. Select the Shape Tool (F10) and right-click on a point, then select Delete from the context menu, or simply double-click the node with the Shape Tool. After a boolean operations, always check for stray segment and undesired nodes.

Step 8 - Glamorizing Begins
Make a copy of the character by moving it to the left, but just a tiny bit. Select the resulting shapes and press trim in the Property Bar. Repeat the copy and trim operation to the right, up and down.

Always move away the resulting chips and break them apart (Command + K). These small shapes will be the building bricks of the look we're creating.

Step 9 - The Creative Part
Arrange the chips so that they overlap the original object. Rotate, scale, or duplicate them in a creative way, until you're satisfied with the outcome.

Make an extra copy of the original shape for later use. Select the original shape and the chips and weld them by pressing the Weld icon on the Property Bar.

Step 10 - Let There Be Highlight
Pick the Interactive Contour Tool by pressing longer on the Effects Tool on the toolbar. In the properties bar, choose Inner contour, Number of steps 1, and a small offset depending on the size of your character. From the Arrange menu choose Break Contour Group Apart.

Step 11 - Finishing the Highlight
Pick the resulting object, clean it up, and position somewhere towards the top-left part of your character.

We are almost there. Make one more highlight if you wish following Steps 11-12.

Step 12 - The Tedious Part
Repeat Steps 4-12 on all the characters.
Step 13 - Bring it All Together
Using the original text as a template move the modified characters to their place.

Get creative on the initials and use swirls and swashes derived from the characters to make the design coherent.

Step 14 - Experiment with Color Setups
When finished, group the characters and highlights in two separate groups to make the color experimentation easier. The ideal color setup would be something like a darker base color and a lighter shade of it for the highlight.

To Sum Up
In this tutorial, we created a typography effect by using only parts of the original type, which makes the whole thing work together. Using this trim and weld technique, you can always give some extra details to your type treatments or vectors.
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User Comments
( ADD YOURS )Niels July 28th
This is a great tip..!!
Love designing custom typography, doing it for years,
but this will really amp it up
Thanks
( )Anderson July 28th
Fantastic! Easy to follow with an amazing result. Nice work!
( )Slyjester July 28th
That’s a neat effect.
( )Ryan July 28th
Yep. Nice Work!
( )kevin July 28th
nice outcomes, will defintiely have to try this.
( )Brad July 28th
Very cool effect!
( )Brent Nelson July 28th
Looks good. Great job helping us spiff up our old fonts.
( )Matthew Booth July 28th
wow, that is pretty sweet, some good tips and tricks for an Illustrator noob like myself! Can’t wait to find something to use this on.
( )Brett July 28th
That is really cool, and that image would make a killer t-shirt.
( )Nikhil July 28th
Nice work….
( )The final effect is awesome….
have to keep patience till all the letters get decorated…..
tstaires July 28th
I would love to see this tutorial with AI. Good stuff!
( )Ferenc July 29th
It’s almost the same in AI but instead of CorelDraw’s Boolean operations simply use the Pathfinder palette options to create the small chips that give detail to your type treatment
( )Diego SA July 28th
My God, that’s what I’d call an extreme makeover. The before and after previews are so different of each other that makes the final result absolutely incredible! Good tutorial. Certainly in my next logo I’ll try to create a extreme logo changing! Thanks!
( )David July 28th
You are awesome as always…
( )Shawn July 28th
What a great tutorial and what a great effect! I’m sure it will take some practice but looks like it will be well worth the time! Thanks
( )tutorialslounge July 28th
i really like your work. classical design
( )rory July 29th
Oh I love this, the font looks amazing!
( )Those little touches, make all the difference and really bring it to life.
I’m gonna rip that off straight away – thanks
g3niuz July 29th
amazing stuff…
love this style
( )squareart July 29th
Stunning! I love what you’ve done here. You have a great attention to detail. Thanks mate.
( )Justin St. Germain July 29th
ok, you must be in an old version of illustrator cause i just started really using illustrator in CS4, and half the things you say to do, are either not there, or it does automatically, so, not able to follow this unfortunately.
( )Ferenc July 29th
the detailed steps (and screenshots) are done in CorelDraw but the technique applies for most of the vector drawing software (Adobe Illustrator for example), you just have to find the right tools
( )odisoes July 29th
Cool process man. Thank you very much for this usefull Tip.
( )Rob July 29th
bravo!
( )Luke July 29th
Very nice! I love the final look! This will be very useful! I think that there needs to more typography tuts…..or maybe a typography tuts site!!!!
( )Imran Ali Dina July 29th
Wow this is a nice tutorial. Thanx
( )Ferenc July 29th
Thanks a lot for the comments, you put me to the blush:)
( )Bill July 29th
That’s sick. Really cool.
( )Ike Allred July 29th
That’s great! I’ve never thought about duplicating the text like that to achieve that effect! Kudos!
( )Dai Hoang July 30th
How may i comment! A good work and awaresome!
( )Sam July 31st
That is a really cool text effect, I love it! Thank you.
( )Aldana from Argentina July 31st
PLease post for Illustrator, i try but i couldn´t!
Thanks is increidble please post for illustrator!!!
( )Ferenc August 4th
Aldana, soon I will try to post a similar technique for Adobe Illustrator. Thanks for the comment.
( )Tutorial City August 2nd
very beautiful! nice work
( )Maurizio Liberato August 3rd
Cool! I’ll try that!
( )solwyvern August 3rd
First thing that came to mind when I saw the thumb, was the ‘CocaCola Logo’
haha…
Outcome looks great, seems like alot of work and alot of time to make though,..
( )Heyki August 4th
Amazing !
( )Aonghus August 12th
Nicely done – I love that this technique ensures the curves of the “chips” naturally mimic those of the letters. It also works really well with the curly/organic style that’s fashionable at the moment.
At Step 10 I turned off my original text layer and those chips create a really beautiful effect on their own – if you follow all the curves of the original letters you can create the impression of the letters formed by shards. They worked especially well in white on a coloured background.
Thanks again, looking forward to seeing more of your tutorials.
( )Ferenc August 13th
That’s a great idea Aonghus!
( )ascu August 12th
i am only a budding student of graphic design, but this tutorial is very inspiring. keep up the good work thank you.
( )Darrin October 2nd
Maybe Livebrush could be of some assistance in creating these kinds of graphics. Just saw this in their forum http://www.livebrush.com/phpbb3/viewtopic.php?f=15&t=49
( )Csaba Kremser October 21st
Nagyon tetszik, ügyes ötlet.
( )SH_Rock November 15th
Could someone show how to make this in Illustrator
( )or at least tell how to do the break apart function
G November 16th
How do you create the highlights in illustrator easily?
( )