Click on any phrase to play the video from that point.
[Adobe Muse]
Adobe Muse is brought to you by the team who created InDesign.
[Terry White, Worldwide Design Evangelist] Designing for the web starts to feel like
you're designing for print, using features that are familiar
to users of Adobe Photoshop and InDesign.
So let's get started with site maps and master pages.
So in Adobe Muse, I'm in my site map,
which has the pages that I've already started to lay out.
I can add an additional page just by clicking the plus sign,
and then I can go ahead and title that page.
Once I have the title of the page, I can even change the backgroud
just by dragging a different master.
Now that I've got the master on that page,
I'm going to go ahead and double-click on it
and begin the editing process on this page.
So for example, I can place photos or graphics
including native Photoshop files.
Once I place this, I can go ahead and size it any size I need it to be,
and then I can begin to work with the beautiful typography in Muse.
So for example, let's grab my type tool,
drag out a type frame here,
and I can type, for example, the word "fashion."
Now that I've got that word there, I want it in a nicer font.
I have the choice of using my system fonts,
web-safe fonts that are compatible across all browsers,
and of course web fonts.
The 400+ web fonts that come with Adobe Muse
give me beautiful typography that's unparalleled on the web.
So let's go ahead and choose a font.
Once we have that font in place, we can even use
custom paragraph styles and character styles to style it.
As a designer, you can express yourself and create beautiful websites.
From there, Adobe Muse takes that design and generates the code for you.
[Adobe]
