![]() It doesn't always grant us the beauty and sophistication of type designs we love, but it insures information design is successful, and that's priority number one. I run a presentation design service bureau, and this is one of the Quality tests all our designers use to check legibility and scale. So you need to increase your distance by 5x and see if you can still read the content on the screen. But if when you blow it up to the size of your monitor that is at 125%, then you know that's 5x bigger. So if it's at 25% and that size matches the physical size of an iPhone, great. Now, when you zoom in, and the artboard increases in size relative to your monitor, take that growth rate, and move yourself farther away by that amount. Note: When working with artboards, and when designing different pieces of art on different artboards, make sure you keep enough space in between these artboards so that if in the future, you need to change the size of the artboard, it does not overlap on the artboard next to it. Now, note the percentage you are viewing it at. Changing the Size of an Artboard on Adobe Illustrator. That's your Quality Test for legibility, etc. No when you are designing your slides, zoom out so that it the size of the artboard on your screen matches the physical size of a phone or device you would hold in your hand next to the screen. ![]() ![]() In my experience, make it the 16:9 widescreen format. ![]()
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