The most dazzling part of Illustrator CS5 isn't even so much new as an expansion on something the CS4 version introduced: multiple artboards. A new artboards panel gives you instant access to all the artboards you've created (you can have up to 100, of any size, within one document), and lets you add, delete, duplicate, name, or reorder them, just as if they were layers. You can rearrange them on your document in any of four different layout styles (grid by row, grid by column, arrange by row, or arrange by column), with any spacing you specify. Better still: If you want to reuse a graphical element from one artboard in the same location on several other artboards, you can choose a single menu option (or hit Alt-Shift-Ctrl-V) and that element is copied automatically. This is a huge time-saver—and long overdue.
Illustrator: Smaller Scale Enhancements
The usefulness of many of the remaining features, however, may depend much more on the type of work you do on a regular basis. A selection of new perspective tools make drawing in three dimensions considerably easier—you have full access to, and control over, a three-way perspective grid to which objects and text can "mold" automatically. Strokes have been given a modest boost with new tools that simplify the creation of them in variable widths (you can also apply dashed lines or dynamic arrowheads). Stretch and corner control for brushes keep your creations looking clean even if they're on the complicated side.
If you're really into painting, the new Bristle Brush replicates the experience astonishingly well, creating vectors that very closely resemble what you'd get from a real-world brush. And there's not a small selection of available brushes, either—you can choose the style (round fan, flat curve, and flat angle are among the options), size, bristle length, density, thickness, paint opacity, and even stiffness to get exactly the effect you want.
Delicate raster images at low resolutions, such as those designed for the Web or mobile devices, can look blurred or grainy if they're not organized just right, and Illustrator CS5 offers some tools for dealing with that problem. You can align objects directly to the nearest closest pixel edge, and there are three different types of anti-aliasing (sharp, crisp, and strong) for improving the look of text in your images.
Illustrator is also tightly integrated with Flash Catalyst, maintaining objects such as artboards, layers, and names, so moving back and forth between the programs when you're working on animation doesn't cause you to lose your place or your mind. (Flash Catalyst lacks Illustrator's sleekness of interface, so flipping between the two may still be visually jarring.)
The question for Adobe Illustrator CS5 becomes, then: How many of these new features will you really use? If the answer is "few" or "none," you shouldn't consider this a run-out-and-buy upgrade, despite the usefulness of the artboard functionality and Shape Builder. This is a diffuse collection of features, to be sure, with little narrow appeal. Still, they do nicely fill some of the gaps in Illustrator's capabilities, and when you consider the changes in CS4, represent a huge jump over CS3 ($599 list, ) and earlier editions (to say nothing of competing products like Corel Painter 11) ($429 direct, ). Regardless of whether or not you need everything it has to offer, this is the best Illustrator yet.
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