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Hamm6457569

: I have a few suggestions that may help: When resizing the image, turn on "Scale Styles" in the Image Resize dialog to avoid having to rescale them yourself. They should then look exactly

@Hamm6457569

I have a few suggestions that may help:


When resizing the image, turn on "Scale Styles" in the Image Resize dialog to avoid having to rescale them yourself. They should then look exactly the same whenever you scale.
If you make a huge version and turn it into a smart object, you can scale to your heart's content, place it in other documents, etc.
To take text into Illustrator, select the text (not the layer!) and Copy, then Paste into AI. This is essential when you need to really get down and dirty with OpenType options such as alternate glyphs.
In Illustrator you'll find many effects that work the pretty much the same way as they do in PS. Just be sure to set your raster effects (Effects > Document Raster Effects Settings...) to 300 ppi or whatever you need. The "Photoshop Effects" section uses the same code as Photoshop, so it all works the same way.
Under Effect > Stylize you'll find inner and outer glows and drop shadows.
To get effects to scale in AI, turn on the "Scale Strokes and Effects" checkbox in Preferences > General.
To recreate your gradient overlay effect, which is one that's NOT available natively in AI, create a new gradient fill swatch in AI and add it to the text using the Appearance panel ("New Fill" is what you want here). You can change its blend mode via the Opacity settings, and edit the gradient itself using the Gradient panel while the text is selected. (You can't fill text with a gradient in AI unless you use the "Additional Fill" feature in the Appearance panel or outline the text using Object > Create Outlines.)
The Appearance panel in AI allows multiple fills and strokes to be added to a single object.


You should be able to bring your text into AI easily enough, then apply the effects just as you're familiar with. From there you can scale as needed, but you can also scale in PS, as I've indicated, if you turn on the "Scale Styles" checkbox.

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