Friday, April 24, 2009

CorelDRAW® Graphics Suite X3 Packs an Easy-To-Use Graphics Punch

CorelDRAW® Graphics Suite X3 Packs an Easy-To-Use Graphics Punch
By Steve Bain

Corel's flagship graphics suite has certainly developed a loyal worldwide following over the years. Reasons for this loyalty include the ease with which users can create sophisticated graphics and the suite's friendly interface and easy-to-use effects. Even newcomers to the suite find how fast and simple it is to create complex designs and perform fancy graphics tricks.

CorelDRAW® Graphics Suite X3 delivers even more on this theme with a more intuitive interface and innovative learning resources. Let's take a look at several new features that really shine - including a new context-sensitive docker, a new feature called Insights from the Experts, and some key enhancements made to the main vector-handling capabilities in CorelDRAW.

Tips from Your Own Personal Trainer

If you're new to either CorelDRAW or Corel PHOTO-PAINT®, the new Hints docker may quickly become your best friend. It works like a personal training coach, providing step-based instructions on how to use the program. It displays real-time tips, techniques, and step-by-step directions for whatever tool or interactive effect you happen to be using at the moment.

For example, in CorelDRAW X3, when you click a complex star with the Shape Tool, the Hints docker immediately provides the steps needed to perform mirror editing on the shape (see below).

You can also use the Hints docker to learn how to use complex tools and effects in Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3. For example, when you select the Clone Tool while editing an image, the Hints docker instantly displays quick tutorial information on how to perform detailed photo-retouching operations by cloning from one area of an image onto another (see below).

To open the Hints docker in CorelDRAW X3 or PHOTO-PAINT X3, choose Help > Hints, or choose Window > Dockers > Hints. In its default state, the Hints docker shows a list of basic tasks in hyperlink form. Just click a heading to explore a topic, and use the Back and Forward buttons to navigate between pages as you would any browser. You can click the Home button to reset the list, or you can click the Help button to open the traditional Help application (see below).

To experience how helpful the Hints docker is, follow these quick steps on creating a rounded-corner rectangle, rotating it 45 degrees, and applying a linear fountain fill:

  1. Launch CorelDRAW X3, open a new or existing document, and open the Hints docker by choosing Help > Hints.


  2. Choose the Rectangle Tool (F6) from the Toolbox, and draw a rectangle. You're not sure how to draw a rectangle? Just read the steps displayed in the Hints docker (see below).

  1. With the rectangle still selected, choose the Shape Tool (F10) from the Toolbox and round the corners interactively. If this procedure is new to you, use the Hints docker, which provides steps on how to round the rectangle corners (see below).

  1. With the rectangle corners rounded, choose the Pick Tool (press Spacebar), and click the selected shape to display the interactive rotation and skewing handles. Rotate the rectangle 45 degrees, using the steps provided in the Hints docker (see below).

  1. Apply a fountain fill to the rectangle by using the Interactive Fill Tool. If you've never used this particular tool before, just follow the instructions in the Hints docker to create and customize your fountain fill colors.

Expert Insights from Working Professionals

The new Insights from the Experts feature taps into the global Corel community and links you to a series of practical project tutorials written by experts. If you happen to frequent Corel's support newsgroups, you may even recognize some of the featured professionals, who include designers, illustrators, and cartoonists from Germany, Bulgaria, Denmark, Canada, the United States, and elsewhere. To access this new feature, just choose Help > Insights from the Experts (see below).

The Insights from the Experts Web page introduces you to your host tutorial authors and describes the projects you can tackle (see below). Click a project graphic to open one of the tutorials in Adobe® Acrobat® Reader®.

By following these tutorials, you'll discover strategies and techniques from professionals who use CorelDRAW and Corel PHOTO-PAINT. For example, you can learn photorealistic illustration effects, techniques for designing billboards and signage, and a method for creating t-shirt designs for screen printing (see below).

A Friendlier Face to Work With

Several improvements in CorelDRAW X3 make core competencies easier to use. If you're an experienced user upgrading to this version, the new Highlight What's New option lets you quickly ramp up to what's new and different. You can even customize the feature by choosing to highlight differences from specific past versions of either CorelDRAW X3 or Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3, as far back as version 9 (see below). The feature works independently of workspace preferences, which makes it truly convenient.

The color highlighting appears on Toolbox tools, Property Bar options, and menu commands (see below), so that you can quickly reap the benefits of recent changes virtually anywhere in the suite.

When you get down to the basics of vector drawing, you'll find that the new line drawing and editing functions in CorelDRAW X3 are now easier and more intuitive, thanks to new on-screen changes to feedback colors of nodes and curve handles. Node markers and curve handles now appear in blue instead of black. Curve handle markers are larger and now include arrowheads (see below), making them easier to spot against darker backdrops.

When the Shape Tool is being used for editing, unselected nodes appear as blue outlined markers, and selected nodes appear as solid blue squares. This same interface scheme is displayed when you use the Bézier Tool to draw shapes and lines (see below).

Improvements to object snapping and the accompanying on-screen snap point feedback in CorelDRAW X3 have made object snapping more precise. The location and display of perpendicular and tangent snap points make precision drawing much more intuitive (see below), improving on the extensive object-snapping capabilities added in version 12.

If you're a long-time CorelDRAW user, here's an enhancement you might easily miss. When the Shape Tool is used to edit object shapes, CorelDRAW has long allowed the curvature of curve segments to be altered by using a click-drag action. Improvements to the Shape Tool now enable you to move straight segments in the same way. Simply click anywhere on the line, and drag in any direction to reposition the segment while preserving its relative node positions (see below).

When working with objects created through tracing bitmap images or objects imported from other applications, you may often end up with excessive or redundant nodes. These extra nodes can sometimes cause problems in reproduction processes such as printing, plotting, or vinyl cutting. CorelDRAW X3 now includes a Reduce Nodes command button, which lets you instantly decrease the node population on a selected object without altering the object shape. You'll find this button on the Property Bar when you use the Shape Tool to edit a node selection.

To see just how efficient the Reduce Nodes command is, follow these quick steps:

  1. Choose the Shape Tool (F10), and select a shape that includes an excessive number of object nodes.

  2. Click the Select All Nodes button on the Property Bar to select all nodes on the object (see below). The Status Bar displays the total number of object nodes currently selected.

  1. Click the Reduce Nodes button on the Property Bar to eliminate the redundant nodes (see below). What remains is the minimum number of nodes needed to describe the shape.

While the object nodes are still selected, you can check the Status Bar to see how many nodes were successfully eliminated. In the example below, the Reduce Nodes command was applied to an overly complex ellipse, reducing the node population from 128 to a mere 4 nodes without visibly altering the object shape.

Although we've looked at several of the new features that make the CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X3 more powerful and intuitive to use, many users will already know why they've made it their graphics tool of choice. Ultimately, having more to like leads to more who like it.

Thursday, April 23, 2009

ABOUT CorelDRAW

CorelDRAW is a vector graphics editor developed and marketed by Corel Corporation of Ottawa, Canada. It is also the name of Corel's Graphics Suite. Its latest version, named X4 (actually version 14), was released in January 2008.

Contents

Supported platforms

CorelDRAW was originally developed for Microsoft Windows and currently runs on Windows XP and Windows Vista.[1] The current version, X4, was released (ver. 14.0.0.567) on 22nd January, 2008.

Versions for Mac OS and Mac OS X were at one time available, but due to poor sales these were discontinued. The last port for Linux was version 9 (released in 2000, it didn't run natively, instead it used a modified version of Wine to run) and the last version for OS X was version 11 (released in 2001). Also, up until version 5, CorelDRAW was developed for Windows 3.1x and OS/2.

Development history

In 1987, Corel hired software engineers Michel Bouillon and Pat Beirne to develop a vector-based illustration program to bundle with these desktop publishing systems. That program, CorelDRAW, was initially released in 1989. The program was well received, and Corel soon focused on software alone.

CorelDRAW 1.x and 2.x runs under Windows 2.x and 3.0. CorelDRAW 3.0 came into its own with Microsoft's release of Windows 3.1. The inclusion of TrueType in Windows 3.1 transformed CorelDRAW into a serious illustration program capable of using system-installed outline fonts without requiring third party software such as Adobe Type Manager and also was the first all-in-one Graphics Suite, which combined a vector graphics software with a photo editing program (PhotoPaint), a font manager and several other pieces of software included with each version.

Characteristic features

Several innovations to vector-based illustration originated with CorelDRAW: a node-edit tool that operates differently on different objects, fit text-to-path, stroke-before-fill, quick fill/stroke color selection palettes, perspective projections, mesh fills and complex gradient fills.[citation needed]

CorelDRAW differentiates itself from its competitors in a number of ways:

The first is its positioning as a graphics suite, rather than just a vector graphics program. A full range of editing tools allow the user to adjust contrast, color balance, change the format from RGB to CMYK, add special effects such as vignettes and special borders to bitmaps. Bitmaps can also be edited more extensively using Corel PhotoPaint, opening the bitmap directly from CorelDRAW and returning to the program after saving. It also allows a laser to cut out any drawings.

CorelDRAW's capability to handle multiple pages along with multiple master layers from within the main program provides a major benefit compared to Adobe Illustrator. Multipage documents are easy to create and edit and the Corel print engine allows for booklet and other imposition so even simple printers can be used for producing finished documents. One of the useful features for single and multi-page documents is the ability to create linked text boxes across documents that can be resized and moved while the text itself resets and flows through the boxes. Useful for creating and editing multi-article newsletters etc.

Smaller items, like business cards, invitations etc, can be designed to their final page size and imposed to the printer's sheet size for cost-effective printing. An additional print-merge feature (using a spreadsheet or text merge file) allows full personalization for many things like numbered raffle tickets, individual invitations, membership cards and more. A bit like microsoft publisher but a lot more flexible and user friendly.

CorelDRAW's competitors include Adobe Illustrator and Xara Xtreme. Although all of these are vector-based illustration programs, the user experience differs greatly between them. While these programs will read their native file types and vice versa, the translation is almost never perfect. CorelDRAW can open Adobe PDF files: Adobe PageMaker, Microsoft Publisher and Word, and other programs can print documents to PDF using the Adobe PDFWriter printer driver, which CorelDRAW can then open and edit every aspect of the original layout and design. CorelDRAW can also open PowerPoint Presentations and other Microsoft Office formats with little or no problem.

CorelDRAW Graphics Suite

Over time, additional components were developed or acquired and bundled with CorelDRAW. The list of bundled packages usually changes somewhat from one release to the next. There are several mainstays that have remained in the package for many releases now, however: PowerTRACE (a bitmap to vector graphic converter), PHOTO-PAINT (a bitmap graphic editor), and CAPTURE (a screen capture utility).

The current version of CorelDRAW Graphics Suite, X4 (actually version 14), contains the following packages:

  • CorelDRAW: Vector graphics editing software
  • Corel PHOTO-PAINT: Raster image creation and editing software
  • Corel CAPTURE: Enables several methods of image-capture
  • Corel PowerTRACE: Converts raster images to vector graphics (available inside the CorelDraw program).

Features by version

  • Ver. 2 (1991): Envelope tool (for distorting text or objects using a primary shape), Blend (for morphing shapes), Extrusion (for simulating perspective and volume in objects) and Perspective (to distort objects along X and Y axes).
  • Ver. 3 (1992): Included Corel PHOTO-PAINT* (for bitmap editing), CorelSHOW (for creating on-screen presentations, CorelCHART (for graphic charts), Mosaic and CorelTRACE (for vectorizing bitmaps). The inclusion of this software was the precedent for the actual graphic suites.
  • Ver. 4 (1993): Included Corel PHOTO-PAINT* (for bitmap editing), CorelSHOW (for creating on-screen presentations, CorelCHART (for graphic charts), CorelMOVE for animation, Mosaic and CorelTRACE (for vectorizing bitmaps). The inclusion of this software was the precedent for the actual graphic suites.
  • Ver. 5 (1994): This is the last version which was made for, and works on Windows 3.x. Corel Ventura was included in the suite (and then sold as a separate program). It was a desktop publishing application akin to PageMaker, Quark Express, or InDesign.
  • Ver. 6 (1995): This is the first version which was made exclusively for 32-bit Windows. New features were customizable interface, Polygon, Spiral, Knife and Eraser tools. Corel Memo, Corel Presents, Corel Motion 3D, Corel Depth, Corel Multimedia Manager, Corel Font Master and Corel DREAM (for 3D modelling) were included in the suite.
  • Ver. 7 (1997): Context-sensitive Property bar, Print Preview with Zoom and Pan options, Scrapbook (for viewing a drag-and-dropping graphic objects), Publish to HTML option, Draft and Enhanced display options, Interactive Fill and Blend tools, Transparency tools, Natural Pen tool, Find & Replace wizard, Convert Vector to Bitmap option (inside Draw), Spell checker, Thesaurus and Grammar checker. The suite included Corel Scan and Corel Barista (a Java-based document exchange format).
  • Ver. 8 (1998): Digger selection, Docker windows, Interactive Distortion, 3D, Envelope and tools, Realistic Dropshadow tool, interactive color mixing, color palette editor, guidelines as objects, custome-sized pages, duotone support. Corel Versions was included in the suite.
  • Ver. 9 (1999): Mesh fill tool (for complex color filling), Artistic Media tool, Publish to PDF features, embedded ICC color profiles, Multiple On-screen Color Palettes and Microsoft Visual Basic for Applications 6 support. The suite included Canto Cumulus LE, a piece of software for media management.
  • Ver. 10 (2000): CorelR.A.V.E. (for vector animation), Perfect Shapes, Web graphics tools (for creating interactive elements such as buttons), Page sorter, multilingual document support, navigator window.
  • Ver. 11 (2002): Symbols library, image slicing (for web design), pressure-sensitive vector brushes, 3-point drawing tools.
  • Ver. 12 (2003): Dynamic guides, Smart Drawing tools, Export to MS Office or Word option, Virtual Segment Delete tool, Unicode text support.
  • Ver. X3 (2006): Double click Crop tool ( the first vector software able to crop groups of vectors and bitmap images at the same time), Smart fill tool, Chamfer/Fillet/Scallop/Emboss tool, Image Adjustment Lab. Trace became integrated inside Draw under the name PowerTRACE.
  • Ver. X4 (2008): Whatthefont font identification service linked inside CorelDraw, ConceptShare, Table tool, independent page layers, live text formatting, support for RAW camera files.

Read / Write between the versions

                 ...read files   ...write files                    CorelDRAW was
 CorelDRAW       saved in the    in the native                     designed for
 version X       native format   format for                        use with
 can...          of version X    version X                         Windows X
 ---------       --------------- ---------------                   --------------
 1               1               1                                 2.1 (1.2 also for Win30)
 2               1,2             1,2                               3.0
 3               1,2,3             2,3                             3.0, 3.1 (preferred)
 4               1,2,3,4             3,4                           3.1
 5               1,2,3,4,5           3,4,5                         3.1
 6                   3,4,5,6             5,6                       95
 7                   3,4,5,6,7           5,6,7                     95, NT4.0
 8                   3,4,5,6,7,8           6,7,8                   95, NT4.0
 9                   3,4,5,6,7,8,9       5,6,7,8,9                 95, 98, NT4.0
14                                           7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14  XP, Vista

Trivia


Lists of miscellaneous information should be avoided. Please relocate any relevant information into appropriate sections or articles. (April 2008)

  • The software mascot was originally a moustached man with a hat called Waldo. "Waldo" was the code name for the first version.
  • The first versions of CorelDRAW included its own proprietary fonts, which had the extension .wfn (Waldo fonts).
  • CorelDRAW can actually be used to create TrueType fonts since at least version 4, although the creating of kerning pairs still cannot be adjusted inside the program. Later CorelDRAW versions can export also PostScript and OpenType fonts.[2]
  • In 1998, a vector illustration of Hedy Lamarr's face was used by Corel Corporation on the packaging and in the publicity for its CorelDRAW 8 software. Lamarr sued Corel for damages relating to unauthorized use of her likeness. The case was resolved in 1999 and settled out of court for an undisclosed sum, under terms that allowed Corel five years of exclusive rights to the image.
  • South Park characters, scenery, and props are drawn using CorelDRAW.[3]

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ System Requirements - CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X4
  2. ^ Font Creation Tutorial for CorelDRAW V0.91
  3. ^ The Making of South Park

CorelDRAW Tutorials

CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X3 Advances to the Next Level
By Steve Bain

A peek under the hood of the CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X3 hints at a change in the wind at Corel. Two years of development and more rigorous testing have brought to the suite better reliability and performance along with the many new tools, effects, and advancements. But it's the quality woven into the very fabric of the suite that really caught my eye. Maybe, it's the subtle sophistication that comes with maturity. Take a look at what's new, and you'll see what I mean.

CorelDRAW X3's New and Improved Tools
CorelDRAW X3 boasts a myriad of new and improved Toolbox components. The new innovations include an ingenious new Smart Fill tool, a new bitmap-cropping tool, an overhauled star-drawing tool, and significant improvements to the Shape Tool.

The Smart Fill Tool doesn't just apply fill colors to shapes, it also creates the shapes. Just use the Property Bar options to choose your fill and outline colors and the outline width, and click an enclosed area where any two shapes overlap (as shown below). The result is a new shape that exactly matches the area you clicked. The Smart Fill Tool simultaneously performs a shaping command and applies new fill and outline colors to the new object.

The Crop Tool enables you to interactively redefine the rectangular boundaries of an existing bitmap. Just marquee-select the area you wish to preserve, and double-click to permanently eliminate the unwanted pixels (as shown below).

The Polygon Tool seen in previous versions has been split in two separate tools to make drawing stellated (star) shapes easier for experts and less mysterious for new users. The Star Tool now enables you to draw simplified star shapes (formerly created using the Star mode of the Polygon Tool). The Complex Star Tool enables you to create the more complex stars shapes previously drawn with the Polygon Tool (as shown below).

Shapes created with the Complex Star Tool now include glyph nodes for controlling the position of the outer points when editing their shape at the node level (see below).

The Shape Tool has been enhanced to provide improved interactive feedback when you're making node selections and while manipulating nodes and curve segments. When making node selections, a new Property Bar option now enables you to choose between Freehand or Rectangular selection modes (see below).

Vector editing is now easier and more intuitive thanks to the new Shape Tool onscreen feedback during node editing sessions. Nodes and curve markers now appear in blue, and curve handles now sport arrowhead shapes (see below), making them easier to differentiate from surrounding elements. These markers also appear while you're drawing curves with the Bezier Tool.

New Object-Shaping Commands

If you've ever tried to manually round or bevel the point where two straight lines join, you'll appreciate the three new shaping commands in CorelDRAW X3. You can now instantly apply symmetrical chamfering, filleting, or scalloping commands to objects. These corner-shaping effects can be applied to a specific radius value by using a new a docker (shown below), essentially eliminating the time-consuming workarounds needed to accomplish the same effect.

Chamfering enables you to apply inside rounding to straight corners, while filleting applies the inverse of this shaping effect (as shown below). Scalloping enables you to create a flattened-corner effect of a specific length.

You can apply these shape commands to all corners of an object selected by using the Pick Tool, or apply the effects only to specifically selected points by using the Shape Tool (see below)

.

While we're on the subject of shaping, you'll also find an object cut-line/keyline command available in this version. The Create Boundary command enables you to create a new shape based on the enclosed area created by any overlapping shapes. You can access it from the Shaping portion of the Property Bar (shown below) or from the Object menu.

The new shape is closed and is based on your current fill and outline property defaults. The Create Boundary command can be applied to both vector and bitmap objects. In the illustration shown below, the Create Boundary command was applied to three overlapping rectangles to produce a new shape that precisely matches the outline of the selected overlapping shapes.

New Dynamic-Beveling Effects

Of all the new features, CorelDRAW X3's new dynamic Bevel effect is the only bitmap-based effect you'll see. This cleverly implemented new effect enables you to quickly create realistic-looking three- dimensional effects from flat two- dimensional shapes by way of a new Bevel docker (shown below).

Your object's current fill color serves as the basic color scheme for the effect, with options available for controlling the bevel offset, the shadow color, as well as lighting color, direction, intensity, and altitude options. The effects are dynamic, meaning they can be persistently editable and can be applied by using a flat Emboss style, or realistically by using a Soft Edge style (see below).

Improved Text Resources for Typographic Experts

Text-related tools and resources in both CorelDRAW X3 and Corel PHOTO-PAINT® X3 have been overhauled to include professional-level features sure to please both pundits and critics alike. The logistics behind text formatting is more clearly defined, and you can now insert coding for line and column breaks, and add professional-level hyphens, dashes, and spaces.

CorelDRAW X3 includes two re-engineered text dockers (see below) that supplement, rather than repeat, options found on the Property Bar when you format text.

The new Paragraph Formatting and Character Formatting dockers enable you to apply property changes at the object level by using the Pick Tool, or at the character level by using the Text Tool. As in other professional layout applications, the text docker properties in CorelDRAW X3 are logically organized by style type. Each option area in the dockers can expand or collapse, as needed. The choice of specific text options is menu-based (see below).

The dockers themselves are context-sensitive, which means that they display the current properties of the selected text object or character string. This subtle but important shift in docker operation means that the changes you apply to character or paragraph properties occur instantly - you don't have to click an Apply button as you would in other CorelDRAW dockers. Although the management of typographic properties in CorelDRAW has migrated through several different interface methods over the years, these redesigned dockers offer the smartest solution yet.

Typography professionals will certainly welcome the new special character-coding capabilities of CorelDRAW X3. By choosing Text > Insert Formatting Code, you can access commands for inserting special-function characters (see below). Adding these characters can improve the typographic readability of your designs. You can now control the size of spaces, dashes, and hyphens in text and limit the amount of text in a paragraph text frame. The new formatting codes in CorelDRAW X3 enable you to insert space characters, such as em, ¼-em, en, nonbreaking spaces, and column or frame breaks, into your text.

Advanced dash and hyphen formatting codes enable you to add em and en dashes, and nonbreaking or optional hyphens. You can insert any of the special formatting characters when you import text. You can also use shortcut keys for codes when typing an artistic or paragraph text string. You can also create your own lists of hyphenation exceptions by using the Custom Option Hyphens dialog (see below). Hyphenation can now be toggled on or off for specific text objects using command menus.

New Dynamic Text-to-Path Controls

If you create effects involving text applied to a path, you'll see how much more smoothly this effect can be applied with CorelDRAW X3. Manipulating text on a path is enormously easier, thanks to the new dynamic previewing capabilities.

You can adjust the text position on the path more easily and adjust the path offset interactively. The dynamic feedback shows you the new position of the character string measured to the text baseline position, and an on-screen display shows the precise text-to-path offset value (see below). By dragging the glyph node, you can access a crosshair pointer for controlling the text position on the path, and you can drag the text above or below the path to control the path offset.

The revamped text-to-path Property Bar (see below) also includes several new options. You can quickly mirror the text orientation by using the Mirror Horizontally option and/or Mirror Vertically option. You can also use and control the new Tick Snapping option, which enables you to specify snapping increments for offsets as you position the text in relation to the path.

Better Bullet Options

When it comes to structuring point-form text, you can more easily access and customize bullet effects for selected text. Although CorelDRAW has always enabled you to apply and format bullets, you now have more options and better access to this feature. Just choose Text > Bullets for access to the Bullets dialog (see below), independently of the Text Formatting dialog.

Using the Bullets dialog options, you can customize your bullet characters using any symbol font installed on your system. New options also enable you to automatically set the space between the bullet character and the first character in the string, eliminating the need to devise a tab character arrangement (see below).

Integrated Bitmap Tracing

You no longer need to launch a separate application to trace bitmap images into vectors. Corel's new PowerTRACE utility is now accessible from a single dialog launched from the Bitmap menu or the Bitmap portion of the Property Bar (as shown below).

PowerTRACE includes many of the features previously available in CorelTRACE, but also includes an impressive toolset for customizing and manipulating the colors of the newly traced vector shapes. PowerTRACE features six different tracing modes which provide varying degrees of tracing quality and accuracy. You can also apply a Quick Trace command that is applied almost instantly at basic settings, without opening the dialog.

The example shown below illustrates the tracing results of a digital photo traced by using the Quick Trace command, which generated just 76 objects.

Advanced Color Support

Although applying fill and outline overprints at the object level in CorelDRAW is nothing new, what's new is what you see when one color is set to overprint an underlying color (shown below). You can now choose Enhanced with Overprints (the default view setting) as a view mode to enable you to preview the overprints you manually apply to objects in your drawing.

Expanded Object Layer and Page Ordering

If you're accustomed to working on layers, you'll appreciate the added object ordering commands. You can now control the object layering either within a layer or within the page structure by using new Order commands (shown below). You can use command menus or keyboard shortcuts to quickly change the order of selected objects in relation to their current layer order, or within the page structure.

Recouped Object-Copy Handling Power

CorelDRAW X3 enables you to create copies of selected objects in many ways using a variety of techniques. Improvements in this area make locating the Duplicate offset options easier. The first time you use the Duplicate command (Ctrl+D), a dialog opens (as shown below) prompting you to set and/or confirm your current duplicate options.

The Clone command has returned to the default workspace of CorelDRAW X3 after an absence from last version. You can create a clone by choosing Edit > Clone, to establish a relationship between your clone and its master. The Select Master and Revert to Master commands are available via right- mouse button functionality.

A new Step and Repeat docker now enables you to create multiple copies of selected objects at specified offsets. To toggle display of the docker (shown below), choose Edit > Step and Repeat (Ctrl+Shift+D).

New and Improved Image-Manipulation Tools

A new fully-equipped Image Adjustment Lab (shown below) is now available in both CorelDRAW X3 and Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3, enabling you to quickly correct color and exposure flaws in digital images. This new lab enables you to correct images by creating snapshots of previewed settings for evaluation before making a selection. Adjust image properties manually by using the dialog sliders, or simply click Auto Adjust to apply instant corrections. Auto Adjust can also be applied via command menus without the need to open the dialog.

Revamped Photo-PAINT Cutout Lab

The beefed up Cutout Lab available in Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3 now enables you to fine- tune the defined areas you wish to isolate in an image and use new previewing, background, clip mask, and image- preserving options (as shown below).

New Spot Color and Alpha Channel Options
Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3 includes two new Channel docker options (shown below) for you to use when preparing and manipulating digital images. You may now create new alpha channels as an option from the Channels docker options menu. You may also create new spot color channels enabling you to preserve spot color information for color printing. The spot colors you add can be previewed as either opaque or transparent relative to other colors. Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3 images that include spot color channels can also be saved in PSD, DCS, PDF, or EPS file formats.

Integrated Raw Camera File Support

The CorelDRAW Graphics Suite X3 now includes Raw Shooter, an application that enables you to open and edit the image censor information stored by high-end digital cameras. Raw Shooter 2005 now supports file formats from various manufacturers, including NEF, CRW, DCR, ORF, and MRW.

Advanced PDF Publishing Power
When it comes to digitally publishing your CorelDRAW X3 or Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3 documents, you'll have access to the latest in security advancements. The improved Publish to PDF filter enables you to produce documents that can be viewed with Adobe® Acrobat® Reader® or viewed online with the Acrobat Reader browser plug-in. Although PDF publishing isn't new, the PDF Security options (see below) now enable you to protect the documents you create with passwords for opening, printing, editing, and copying the newly created PDF document.

When using PDF permissions, you can control if and when the document can be opened, edited, or printed. When a Document Open password is used to encrypt a PDF document, Acrobat Reader requires the password to be entered before the document can be viewed, copied, edited, and/or printed. Smarter Learning Resources

If you're a newcomer to CorelDRAW or Corel PHOTO-PAINT, you'll no doubt benefit from the new Hints docker (shown below). It provides task-based directions on how to use program tools and features. The Hints docker is also now context-sensitive, meaning it includes a live-update feature that displays information relevant to whatever tool or feature you select as you work.

A new Insights from the Experts feature links you to a series of project tutorials in PDF format written by well-known experts from the Corel community that guide you through strategies and techniques on how to tackle a wide variety of design projects.

If you're an experienced user who's upgrading, you can quickly get yourself up to speed on what's new and improved from specific past versions using the Highlight What's New. It activates color highlighting to indicated tools, menu commands, and Property Bar options new since previous versions (shown below).

We've really just scratched the surface of what's new and improved in the CorelDRAW X3 Graphics Suite. There are certainly more new features you'll want to explore on your own. In the coming months, we'll take a closer look at how you can benefit from many of the new tools and features in the suite.

Steve Bain is an award-winning illustrator and designer, and the author of nearly a dozen books, including CorelDRAW: The Official Guide.


اس کے علاوہ محترم ساتھیوں کوآن لاءن کورس اور پروجیکٹ پر کام کیا جاتا ہے جس میں مختلف میگزین مکتب اور رساءل کی ڈیزائننگ شامل ہے