

Adobe Dimension won't really allow you to add gradients but I kind of want that as part of my design, so that's why these are also bitmaps as well. I'm not gonna worry too much about the names of these but I'm basically gonna be switching between these different backgrounds to find the ones that I like and these gradients, I'm actually gonna bring in. These are automatically going to be in Adobe Dimension which is nice, I can actually even just grab the layer and bring it in. So here I am in Photoshop, a bunch of bitmap graphics, just images, all I need to do is take those images, drag them into that same library project that I'm dealing with, I just called it my project but this is how I start to sync assets. A number of graphics in here that I can just drop into my library and I actually can't add gradients as a color so what I would do is actually just make my own gradient in Photoshop and bring it into my library panel. I can open up Photoshop and I have a number of graphics in here. Again, I want some bitmap graphics as well. This is actually for my to-go coffee cup right here, can drop that right there, okay? Here's another burst, just putting in various graphics in here, these happen to be all vector in this case but I wanna do some fun things in here, this happens to be just a white logo, so really some interesting things I can do and this one right here, dropping it in here, I'm doing this all in Illustrator. Might end up using this, so I'll drop that in here. I'll just close that file, don't really need that one either but there's other graphics in here, so I'll just tile all of these graphics, right? So this library panel gets to be pretty important.

I'm gonna do this a couple more times because this is what I just do with everything is drop everything in my library including bitmap graphics. Sure enough it's nice and straight and that's how I can start to add these decals. So I could just zero that out just like that. See what's changing over there? It's like, oh I kinda what this turned to the side, oh did I, maybe want to straighten it back up? Right over here I'm basically manipulating all of these numbers. But look at what's happening over in my properties panel. I'm gonna hold on the Shift key, just kinda shrink that down like that, okay? If I decided to rotate it, I'd use that option right there. See how it's wrapping around the side is what's happening and not only that I can decide to potentially resize this. I'm not going to worry to much about the background because I'm going to add a background to this in a second anyway but I can start to kinda get a better view of this but it's nice that once I apply any sort of decal, as it's known, I can then start to reposition it accordingly. There it is, my project, and I can take this Luna logo and drop it right on this bag here. Make sure I'm that same library, we can see it right here.
#Adobe dimension logo free
So to recap this model actually came from Adobe Stock, was a free model and now it's in there but all I need to do is take this, drop it right in here and I'll sync this logo, right just like that, okay? So I can go back into Dimension, open up my Creative Cloud library panel. See all these vectors, really straightforward. Here I am in Illustrator and this is the company, Luna solar roasted coffee. This is really the easiest, in fact I'm gonna grab an Illustrator logo, which is really where all logos seem to start out. So what I have right now are really just a bunch of stock textures and just a general background image but I want to add my own branding to all of these various items here as well as change the background.
