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The following table or figure may be downloaded to PowerPoint for personal use in teaching and presentations. This feature is available to all subscribers to the journal. You MUST read and follow the guidelines at Request to Reproduce AJR Content if you are distributing or using AJR content beyond academic use (limited distribution, non-revenue producing, or educational purposes). (Downloading may take up to 30 seconds.
If the slide opens in your browser, select File -> Save As to save it.)

Fig. 3A. Traditionally rendered illustrations show many types of
soft-tissue and muscular infections. (Reprinted with permission from
[3]) This is only part of
series of illustrations in which illustrator could have used same cross
section of thigh anatomy to illustrate and simplify this concept. By creating
this image with computer and Photoshop (Adobe Systems, San Jose, CA),
illustrator would have to draw and paint normal anatomy only once. Each
subsequent illustration would be produced by placing normal thigh onto bottom
layer and adding abnormal changes on separate top layer. Also, by using same
anatomic data for foundation, viewer can quickly look at important information
in each illustration without having to reorient to each new anatomic detail,
such as in certain muscles or layers of fascia.
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