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Jessie844

: What's the best way to make a curly brace used for grouping items together? Many documents (especially older ones) use what looks like a curly brace { to join multiple elements together. Here's

@Jessie844

Posted in: #AdobeIndesign #AdobePhotoshop #Typography

Many documents (especially older ones) use what looks like a curly brace { to join multiple elements together. Here's an example of this to illustrate programming code, and here's a thread about doing this in TeX.

This can even be done directly in posts on math.SE: an answer using these braces.



What's the best way to go about making braces like this? An ideal solution for my needs would:


use InDesign or Photoshop
keep the typographic look of a serif font's {
be easily expanded to cover more or less area


Any ideas?

Update: Check out the links above. Just resizing a single { character isn't the desired effect. Imagine if there were characters that meant "start of brace", "straight part of brace", "middle of brace", and "end of brace". You could use them together to make one giant brace. Something like `-----v-----' where the brace can encompass more space by simply adding more - characters.

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@Becky351

I know, that this theme is old, but it is still on the top of google search, so I decided to give a reply, by providing an option, not mentioned here yet:


Download a brush set
Install it
Use New layer + Brush settings + Free transform to get the brace of the desired shape

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@Sarah814

Copy-paste the autoshape from Word works for me ;)

It is pasted as a vector shape and can be resized as necessary.

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@Miguel516

Old thread, new solution

Go to TYPE-->GLYPHS
Ensure the Show drop down is set to Entire Font.
Set the font to Symbol | Regular (for some reason this doesn't work on a standard type fram).

In the symbols font, toward the end (just before the closed apple) You'll find the individual bracket elements. Adjust the indent, vertical scale and space after properties until the desired alignment is achieved.



It requires some tweaking, but the results are more aesthetic.

        

Image 2: Example of what it looks like

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@Nickens508

I mostly agree with DA01's answer but I'd do it directly in InDy, since you won't have to switch programs to do some adjustments. So create "curls" by e.g. typing it and create outlines (select text frame with brace to do that)*. Now use "direct selection", but here's the difference: select nodes on both ends of brace simultanously and use "scale" tool with base point of transformation choosen on perpendicular to your scaling direction. That way you'll have brace extended to the perfectly same length in both directions.

*You can do it by selecting text only, but it'll leave shape enclosed in the text frame instead of having it as a separate object without any "frame".

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@Speyer780

In your vector program, type the brace character, scale it, and turn it into a guide. Use that as the outline to draw the brace with Bézier curves. Make it as thick or thin as you like.

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@RJPawlick971

Several options.


draw it. Not that hard to do in a vector illustration program. Draw half of it then flip to make the other half and join them together.
Scale a brace from a particular typeface (as e100 suggests)
or perhaps the easiest/most versatile: choose a brace from a typeface in your vector illustration program of choice and convert it to outlines. You should now be able to select the points along the outer curves and drag them to stretch out the brace but retain it's relatively style/thickness. After dragging them, there may be a bit of tweaking to do, but it's how I've done it in the past.


My ASCII example (the O's being the bezier points):

OxO
x <------+ Select then drag
O these points as needed
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
x
xx
x
x
x
x
x
x
xxx

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@Sims5801359

I think the key point you're asking is how to make one of arbitrary size.

The simple answer is to just scale the { character accordingly. You must scale it proportionally to avoid distortion.

But for a particularly large bracket, this would look too heavy in relation to normal text, so you might choose one from a lighter (less bold) font, or if need be fine tune the width of the strokes.

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