artistfere.blogg.se

Corel draw x6 transparent background
Corel draw x6 transparent background












corel draw x6 transparent background
  1. #COREL DRAW X6 TRANSPARENT BACKGROUND HOW TO#
  2. #COREL DRAW X6 TRANSPARENT BACKGROUND PSP#

I haven't used PSP since v3 so I can't really give much input on that.

#COREL DRAW X6 TRANSPARENT BACKGROUND HOW TO#

GIFs do support transparency, but only a single color can be transparent - to get the smooth edge for transparency you need to use an alpha mask of some sort. How to achieve transparency effect in the program Corel draw Without going into the jungle of vector graphics and assuming that since you are interested in. unless you're talking about web stuff? I got the impression from this that you're doing this for Print. GIFs should never be used for print anyway. TIFs support Alpha Masks which can create the transparency you want. you'll want to create an Alpha Mask/Channel around what you want (feather the mask as needed) and then save it to the TIF format. Now, in terms of transparency, if you're talking Print work. I believe the PSP native format is also non-lossy, so I'd probably save to that. not much you can do about that except open it up and immediately save it to another format. And I do understand that many of the "stock" photos may be in JPG format from the get-go. RE: Image Border - How to? lavaghman (Programmer)Ĭorrect - JPG does not support transparency at all. You'll start to see more and more artifacting in the image, etc. So if you're working on a JPG instead of say the native CPT file, every time you save during your tweaking process, you have the potential of deleting more and more data.

corel draw x6 transparent background

I'll just delete about 5 or 6 of those shades of blue and replace them with whatever shade of blue is nearby." This permanently deletes data from your file - you cannot recover it. I've got about 15 shades of blue in this part of the sky here. JPGs by their nature are lossy - i.e., when you put compression on a JPG file, it does things like "hey, let me see. TIF is another non-lossy format, as is PSD (Photoshop). And since you're going into Draw with these, there's no real reason to not use it. are you just prining these out for home or sending to a service bureau? Personally, I always use the native CPT (Photopaint) format when ever possible as it is a non-lossy format (plus the fact that if in Photopaint you've made an "object" - masked something off and put it on a new layer - and it's in a non-square size, it will keep that transparency around the image when you import it into Draw (note, it may come in as "grouped" with the background so you'll have to ungroup it in Draw). Lavaghman, it depends on what your final product will be i.e.














Corel draw x6 transparent background