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Adobe Fireworks CS5 : Working with Bitmap Images - Managing images on the canvas

11/5/2011 4:12:17 PM
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When you have more than one image or object on the canvas, Fireworks gives you a variety of ways to work with those images, from showing and hiding objects to positioning and grouping them. You’ll find that steps like these are a common part of most design workflows.

Adjusting the watch position

To experiment with this feature, you’ll adjust the position of the watch image you’ve already got open. Because you are dealing with exact measurements here, you need to be aware of the exact x and y coordinates of the image.

1.
Select the watch with the Pointer tool, and check the values for x and y in the Properties panel. The watch should be positioned at X: 30, Y: 135.

Tip

To nudge a selected object 10 pixels at a time, hold down the Shift key as you press the arrow keys. You can also change a selected object’s position by entering new values in the Properties panel.

2.
If the watch is not in position, use the arrow keys on the keyboard to move the image one pixel at a time.

Hiding and locking objects

With the watch cropped, there’s no need for that large ellipse, so let’s hide it from view for now.

1.
In the Layers panel, locate and select the ellipse.

2.
Lock the ellipse object in the Layers panel by clicking the empty box beside the eye icon. Locking the object prevents you from accidentally selecting it.

3.
Click the eye icon to hide the ellipse from view.

To give the design a grittier feel, you’re also going to replace the gradient backdrop with a bitmap image, so we’ll set up for that now.

4.
Hide the gradient rectangle by clicking its eye icon in the Layers panel.

5.
Lock the rectangle in the Layers panel by clicking the empty box beside the eye icon.

Working with guides

In this exercise, you will use guides to help ensure an exact position and height between the canvas and an image you will import into the design. Guides are great tools for aligning and placing objects on the canvas.

1.
If rulers are not visible, choose View > Rulers.

2.
Move the cursor to the ruler at the left of the window.

3.
Click and drag toward the canvas. A vertical guide appears. You will also see a tooltip appear beside the guide, with an x value. (If you don’t see the tooltip, choose View > Tooltips.) This value is the horizontal position of the vertical guide.

Note

The right and bottom guides will not display on a Mac but objects will still behave correctly in proximity to them—snapping to guides, showing distances between guides, and so forth.

4.
When the tooltip displays 0, release the mouse. The guide drops at that location.

5.
Drag in another vertical guide, and place it at 500.

6.
Drag guides from the top ruler to these positions: 0 and 500. If you need to reposition guides, you can simply select them with the Pointer tool and drag them to a new position. Doing so effectively boxes in the canvas.
 
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