 Hello, everybody. Welcome back to another Adobe Illustrator tutorial. Guys, in this one, I'm using Dynamic Corners, which is part of VectorScribe. This is a paid plugin. However, there are two week free trials that you can use it. And basically, there's a whole bunch of stuff you can do with VectorScribe that isn't really native to Illustrator. And I'm going to show you all of them. So let's just get started. The first one we want to talk about here today is Dynamic Corners. I'm going to make a video for each of the different sections. So we're going to do Dynamic Corners in this one, and then you'll see Dynamic Shapes and Pathscribe, etc., in future videos. All right. So here we go, guys. I've got some basic stuff here set up. I've got some rectangle and a couple triangles. And I'm going to show you how the Dynamic Corners works. The first thing you'll do here is I'm going to click on a triangle. And then the Dynamic Corners is this guy here. Now, if you don't have it on the right side like this, you'll see it over here, probably in your toolbar. If you don't see it in your toolbar, you may have to go up to Window, go to Toolbars, and then set it to Advanced. It's possible, depending on what version you have, that it might not be showing. But it should be showing right here. So here we go. Dynamic Corners. I'm going to left-click on that. As soon as I do, Dynamic Corners loads out just like this. Now, it looks pretty bare here. It's not got a lot going on here, but it's more powerful than you'd think. The first thing here we'll do is I'm going to show you as I select part of me. I'm going to go Direct Select Tool. I'm going to select this here. And then I'm going to see here it says Click to Select Dynamic Corners Tool. I'm going to left-click on that. Boom. It opens up. And you're going to see now that I've got some options here. This one here says 30 pixels. When I hover over a corner like this one, and remember this is Dynamic Corners, you're going to see here that it shows you what the corner will look like if I was to click on it. Now, I'm going to go ahead and make this a lot bigger so you can see it. So I'm going to make it to 100 pixels. And bang. When I hover over it like that, boom. We got a... We got... Shoot. Nope. Never mind. Let's do 100 pixels. I'm going to click that again. Sorry, guys. 100 pixels. Hover over. Left-click. There we go. We've got... We're changing the corners just like I said. So we've got the right, left, top, bottom, top, right. There we go. Now, a couple things here I'll show you. There are three styles of corners or rounded corners with Dynamic Corners here. The first one here is the standard one. As you can see here, it's a regular corner. The next one is called Negative Corner. Now, if we were to go ahead and left-click on this, you're going to see here that this has now changed to an inverted or negative corner. If I click on this one and I click that button again, I'm basically like we're taking a bite out of a cookie. So we've got negative corners here, as you can see. And the final one, and this one is very common in drafting and with carpentry, but this one's called Champford Corner. And this is basically just a straight bevel edge, just like this. So these are your options. I'm just going to go ahead and click on them here. Champford Corners, Straight Corners, Standard Corners, Negative Corners, et cetera. Lots of cool things here. The other thing that I want to show you guys here is how to apply a selection to all corners. So if I was to go here and select the whole object, you could apply to selection. So if I wanted to do let's say 60 pixels, and then I wanted that to be applied, I would click that and bang, 60 pixels. Champford, or no, what is this one? Is this one Champford? Yeah, Champford Corner applied to the whole object. So that's another thing you can do with dynamic corners. A couple other things I will show you is that these corners, these handles here are draggable. So you can drag them in and out as you see fit. You can drag one or you can drag them all. If you want to just drag one, I'm going to left click on that and let's do this one here. And you'll see that the other three are represented by arrows. And this one is represented by a pixel or a circle. This one means this one only is being dragged. So if I wanted this one to be in deep like that, there you go. We've got a cool new shape just with a single corner being dragged. The last thing you guys probably want to know about here is the options to use either True Radius or Standard. I will note that Standard is very similar to what the Adobe Illustrator kind of has out of the box. And True Radius is actually pretty unique to the dynamic corners tool. So let's go ahead and take a look at that. So I'm going to go ahead and click on the Selection Tool, Direct Selection Tool. I'm going to select this one here. I'm going to select the first triangle. I'm going to click to select Dynamic Corners. So I have to do that. And then it has this gigantic number here that we don't want. Let's make this 30 pixels. And we're going to go True Radius. Okay, come on. If I could just do this right. And True Radius as you guys have seen, you'll see here. And then we're going to go with Standard, which is different. So if we do True Radius here, let's do True Radius first. Basically, I'm going to apply it to all the corners. That's True Radius. And we're going to make these regular part of me. Let's make them regular or Standard, not this chamfered corner bit. What you're going to see here is when I select 30 pixels, 30 pixels is the distance between the radius point and the edge here. So this always 30 pixels. It's always the same. And if we do it to this one here, I'm going to use this next triangle. This one we're going to do, let's do, yeah, let's do this one with, let's just do this one with Standard. So I'm going to click to apply it. And then in Standard, also 30 pixels. I'm going to go ahead and click on it. And you're going to notice a little bit of a difference. Not a huge difference, but a little bit. They have different looks here on their corners. The distance between the radius point and the edge is not fixed, depending on the angle. So these are the major differences between Dynamic Corners and the Standard Corner work inside of Adobe Illustrator. Guys, I have a ton more stuff coming up. Stay tuned. Thanks for watching the tutorial. I'll be back soon.