Field Notes Inside an Integrated Communications Agency

Drawing in Flash is Suddenly Fun

For nearly as long as I have been a Flash guy, I have longed for a better relationship between myself and the drawing tools available to me in the Flash authoring environment. That's not exactly true. I really just wanted Flash to be more like my beloved Illustrator. Now that Adobe and Macromedia have embarked down their road to application Nirvana, I am suddenly a changed man. I get it now. It's intuitive. Drawing in Flash has come a very long way, and I'm finding myself using Illustrator less and less.

This past weekend a friend asked me to clean up an image he found, so that he could have some vinyl wall art printed up for his kid's bedroom renovation. I agreed to help sight unseen, but experience made me reasonably certain of two things immediately:

1) He found a crappy web graphic online of what he wanted, which would never, ever work

2) I would need to re-draw this art from scratch

I was not disappointed. Here's the original image he provided:

bad image from the Web

As a reflex, I fired up Illustrator and placed the image, then broke out my bezier and went to work. After setting about 10 anchor points, and staring at all the repeated simple shapes, I was possessed by an overwhelming urge to run to Flash. I knocked out the drawing in no time at all, but found myself oddly melancholy after. At some point, after struggling for so long against the but-it's-not-Illustrator effect of learning to draw in Flash, I think I got good at it. And now I enjoy the heck out of it.

Both Illustrator and Flash are powerful, effective and robust tools of our trade, and both have their place in my heart. I officially withdraw my longstanding request to have their toolsets merged. Flash has grown up on its own, and the unique drawing tools it offers have grown on me. Here's the final product. Kid's got good taste in music for a 12-year-old...

vector drawing of the same image, drawn in Flash

  • Brian Lee 3:49 p.m. Aug 07, 2008

    I've always loved Flash's drawing tools. They feel so much more tangible and swift than Illustrator's to me. Takes a lot of steps out of building complex figures, but the control is still there if you need it.

  • John Romano 9:49 a.m. Aug 06, 2008

    I love Flash drawing tools. You can take the beloved Illustrator and chuck it. Flash's drawing tools are simple, elegant, and powerful. The bezier tools are full featured. Add to that the filters available since Flash 8 and you have a strong authoring environment that offers options and control.

    Yes, yes... Illustrator has it's place. Fine. But for interactive work, Flash rocks the quickie mart.

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