In this Illustrator tutorial, I'll show you how to create a trendy retro type treatment with a free font, gradients, blends, and some scatter brushes. It's a relative easy tutorial containing techniques that can be quickly applied to many other type treatments and various graphic elements.
Final Image Preview
Below is the final type treatment image to show you what we're working towards.

Step 1
Before we get started in Illustrator, download the Museo Font, and install it on your system.

Step 2
Create a new Letter sized document, then use the Rectangle Tool (M) to create a rectangle that is the size of your document.

Step 3
Fill the rectangle with a Radial Gradient from the Gradient Panel. Change the first swatch on the Gradient slider to a violet color and change the second swatch to a dark violet color.

Step 4
With the Line Tool (\), draw a line at a 45 degree angle that stretches from the bottom left corner to the top right side. Change the stroke to 5 pt and change the color to white (so you can see it against the background, but we will be changing it soon).

Step 5
Select the line with the Selection Tool (V) while holding down Alt, and drag out a copy to the right and down so the copied line is still inside the background.

Step 6
Select both lines and and create a blend by going to Object > Blend > Make. Next, go to Object > Blend > Blend Options, to bring up the Blend Options dialog. Change the Spacing to Specified Steps from the drop-down menu and change the option to 15.

Step 7
With the blend selected, go to Object > Expand to separate the blend. With the lines still selected, expand again, to outline the stokes.

Step 8
Fill the outlined line with the same Radial Gradient that you used for the background, but change the first swatch to a lighter violet than before.

Step 9
Select the lines and the background, then use the Gradient Tool (G) to adjust the gradient. Click in the middle of the rectangle and drag to the top of the rectangle. This will match up the transitions on the gradients.

Step 10
Create a ellipse with the Ellipse Tool (L) that is 10 px by 10 px. Fill it will a violet color.

Step 11
With the ellipse selected, go to Object > Path > Offset, to bring up the Offset Path dialog. In the dialog, change the Offset to -4 px. Change the offset ellipse to a light orange.

Step 12
Select the bigger ellipse and change the opacity to 0 from the Transparency Panel. Select both ellipses and create a blend by going to Object > Blend > Make.

Step 13
Before you start making a brush in this step, save a copy of the blend for later use. Select the new blend and drag it into the Brush Panel. When the New Brush dialog opens, select New Scatter Brush from the dialog. When the Scatter Brush Options dialog opens you are going to need to change a couple of settings.
First change all the drop-down menus to Random except the Rotation. Change the first field for the Size to 20 and the second field to 100. For the Spacing, change the first to 15 and the second to 115. For the Scatter, change the first to -220 and the second to 175.

Step 14
With the Brush Tool (B), draw a wavy brush stroke in the middle of your background, creating a scatter of your blend.

Step 15
With the brush stroke selected, change the Blend Mode to Overlay from the Transparency Panel and give it an Opacity of 25.

Step 16
Draw four to five more brush strokes, then change all of them to Overlay. Change the opacity on the stroke, but vary the percentage as well as the stroke weights.

Step 17
Select the blend copy that you saved from Step 13 and scale it to 52 px by 52 px.

Step 18
Set the copied shape to Overlay and it place over your brush strokes.

Step 19
Copy (Command + C) the blend ellipse and Paste (Command + V) a couple more times. Scale the copies separately to get varying sizes, then place them in different spots over the brush strokes.

Step 20
That should do it for the background. Now let's take a look at the text. Type out some copy and change the font to the Museo font you downloaded. Change the Tracking to -100 from the Character Panel. Outline the text by going to Type > Create Outlines.

Step 21
With the outlines selected go Object > Ungroup (Command + Shift + G).

Step 22
In this step we're going to modify the text. If you typed something different, the basic idea of connecting the letters will be the same. With the Direct Selection Tool (A), press Shift and select the top right line on the V. Drag the line until it's overlapping the E. You might need to modify individual anchor point as well. In the example below, I dragged the top right anchor point to the right to close up the gap.

Step 23
Continue doing this to the other horizontal elements of the outline text until all the text is connected.

Step 24
Fill the text with a Linear Gradient. Add another swatch to the Linear Gradient by clicking right below the Gradient Slider in the Gradient Panel to give you a three swatch gradient. Change the first swatch to white, the second swatch to a light blue-green color, and the last swatch to a dark blue-green color. Use the Gradient Tool to adjust the gradient so the white color is on top.

Step 25
Place the text in the middle of your document over all the other artwork.

Step 26
For this next step, we're going to create another brush. Draw a 14 px by 14px ellipse. With the Direct Selection Tool, select the right anchor point and drag it to the right - doubling its length. With the point still selected, set the Control Panel defaults to the Anchor Options. To the left of the Control Panel, press the Corner button, converting the anchor point to a corner.

Step 27
Fill the shape with black, drag the shape into the Brush Panel, and Choose New Art Brush from the New Brush dialog. When the Art Brush dialog appears, change the Colorization Method to Tints at the bottom of the dialog.

Step 28
For this step I'm going to use the Brush Tool (B). If you're not comfortable with the Brush Tool (B) for making paths ,then you can use the Pen Tool (P) and apply the brush to the stroke. Create a brush stroke to the bottom left of the V. It is a good idea to change the stroke color to a lighter color than black so you can see it.

Step 29
Drawn another brush stroke above the previous one.

Step 30
Expand the brush strokes by going to Object > Expand Appearance. Next, it's a good idea to clean up the leftover paths by going to Object > Path > Clean Up.

Step 31
Fill the outlined brush stroke with a Linear Gradient. Make the first swatch a blue and the second swatch a dark blue. Select the text and bring it to the front by going to Object > Arrange > Bring to Front.

Step 32
Copy (Command + C) and Paste (Command + V) both shapes numerous times around the text. On some of the copies, change the swatches on the Linear Gradient to a pink color and a dark pink color. Adjust the gradient so the darkest part of the gradient is closet to the text. When you place the copies around the text make sure to rotate and flip the shapes. All done!

Final Image
Below is the final type treatment image again.

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User Comments
( ADD YOURS )pica September 11th
nice one
( )…and a cool font
mongo September 11th
Really nice effect, I like the font used as well
( )Salmen September 11th
nice tuts thnks
( )Shane September 11th
very nice indeed. thanks for posting.
( )lanneld September 11th
good one! i like the font but the “S” looks a bit awkward after you edited it
( )Grafiko September 11th
simple but nice tratment
( )Mikey D September 11th
Complete idiocy here, but how do you manage to convert your text to one continuous path when making the horizonal connections? When I’m doing this, the paths of each letter are overlapping but not “joining”?
( )Grafiko September 11th
simple but nice treatment
( )Geoff September 11th
Such a pain to download the fonts! blaaah
( )Dan September 11th
Really clean. I like
( )NaldzGraphics September 11th
good tutorial.thanks and keep it up as always
Ronald
( )Tadaa September 11th
Another well explained tutorial! Great job!
( )Nate September 11th
This looks awesome Rype. Great technique with an even greater outcome. Thanks for sharing.
( )ANeuby September 11th
Wow. Very nice tutorial!
( )Grant Friedman September 11th
Love the use of the blend tool and scatter brush. Nice work!
( )Matt Halliday September 11th
Really great tutorial. Scatter brush effect is very nice, thanks!
@Mikey D Select your text, go into the Type menu and choose Create Outlines. You can also do this by Right Clicking or Control Clicking.
( )Jeff Finley September 11th
This is actually pretty nice
( )Darrin September 11th
What the hell how does one download the friggin font already ?…………Sorry just getting a little short here.
Thanks for the tutorial very clean.
( )nate September 11th
I’ve often wondered how to apply the scatter brush. Thanks for the tip.
( )andi September 11th
nice one thanks
( )andi September 11th
This scatter brush bit is KILLING my computer. Taking 5min+ just to save the file
( )Darrin September 11th
How do I join the type into one path?
( )bullardino September 11th
Really wonderful. Both the tutorial and the font.
( )Juan Carlos Rendon September 11th
wow is so very great and easy!!
thanks
( )thousand September 11th
if only the font be free to download
( )daniel September 12th
very cool work! i like it a lot, thanks for sharing.
( )Jonathan Cutrell September 12th
Darren (and Mikey D),
to join the path, you can use the pathfinder. Click “merge.”
( )smegboy September 12th
aye thats a really simple yet powerful design.
( )likin it alot, keep it up!
Dainis Graveris September 12th
I enjoyed how font was edited, because it’s one of the most used ways creating logo.
( )5ivedance September 14th
Thanks for sharing.
( )I enjoyed it -__-
bintek September 16th
awesome result! thanks for sharing. (^_^)
( )cmykgirl September 17th
You can also use Rockwell for a similar effect.
( )Vector Graphics September 18th
great tutorial. Thanks Rype
( )Dainis Graveris September 21st
Cool effect and pen tool use
Thanks, friend!
( )SHANEKA September 22nd
Love it! thanks
( )Tobi September 23rd
thanks learn’t a great deal thanks for sharing
( )Dev October 1st
thanks ur ideas, it is very nice
( )hiperkarma October 5th
I can NOT download the Museo font, it brings me from urbanfonts.com to myfonts.com then I just don’t see any download button ffs
( )butchi October 5th
thx Rype!
( )Nice tut, it’s useful for me!
samantha October 6th
hi, you use the ‘object’ menu or menu item quite a bit in this tutorial, but i have no idea where that is. i tried looking in PS help, but it’s no help (as per usual). Can you tell me where this object menu or object menu item is?
( )Thanks!
kelly October 8th
Samantha,
The “object” menu is a drop down directly to the right of “file” & “edit”.
( )Muhammad October 8th
nice post
( )Logotype October 11th
Amazing tutorial. Im not so good with vectors but this one ill try!
( )goce October 13th
Nice one….and i love the font =) Cheers
( )norules November 17th
Hey, thanks heap, very nice work and nicely presented.
( )Well Done!
joanna December 16th
can i download the tutorial, or is it only possible to copy and paste?
( )georgiana February 5th
yeah …nice tut…but had to go trough to many pages to download that font.
( )jan February 23rd
just at step 24, before making the gradient- i don’t know how to make the type/shapes into one path. I’ve tried ‘effects/pathfinder/merge’, that didnt work. nor create outlines- they’re already outlines. without it being one path the gradient is cut up into every section/letter. hmmm…
( )Renjith February 24th
thank u for sharing
( )JoeG March 13th
Excellent instruction. Exactly the effect I needed for my next project! Great job!
( )Kitty April 11th
So far I hate this, it’s stupid to do and seems like there has to be an easier way- this is taking forever.
( )Jovis May 27th
For the issue with the txt object not being one path so that the gradient will work properly…
select the entire text object and make it a group (which may not be necessary, but mine was in a group when I did this) then go to the “object” menu go down to “compound path” and select “make” and your done.
( )Jeremy Darko June 1st
Thanks! Amazing tutorial
( )jakay June 12th
what program is used?
( )nilesh ghuge June 26th
good one.
( )glurt July 28th
Great work, excellent guide. Thanks for your time !
( )Charles Brindle August 3rd
Learned a lot about turning a font into a logo, great tutorial.
( )Afrogirl August 17th
Hello I just made the tut, it is very clear and interesting, I learnt so much with it. Here it is my result in case you want to see it:
http://twitter.com/account/profile_image/Afrogirl22?hreflang=en
Thank you for the great tut
( )Angela September 16th
Great!!!
( )m September 18th
very nice tutorial
great job!!
( )but could someone help me and tell how to download free font from myfonts ? i’m new there and ‘ve got a problem
oli September 23rd
@ m
you add one of the 3 free fonts into your shopping basket and go to the checkout, you have to register a few details first.
im having trouble joining up all the letters so the gradient will flow through the whole word, they are still all separate, ive tried all the suggestions but they dont seem to be working, please help
Great tut so far though
( )kristin October 13th
gorgeous!
( )suresh.k November 30th
very nice thank you very much keept
( )braddamy_designz aim_designz December 15th
Nice tut, shame bout getting the font mind tho!
( )fere January 1st
I really liked the sparkle stuff… nice! thank you.
( )Dan Smith February 1st
The Scatter Brush effect is something I’ve never used and now I think I might do! Thanks for the tutorial.
( )