Corel DRAW
is a supreme supplier of graphics software
CorelDraw was the first drawing that was totally window
based. Luckily, today's Internet is full of totally free alternatives... Coreldraw
tutorial directories like this are usually constantly updated and will
automatically keep you up-to-date with the latest CorelDRAW tutorials that are
published over the web.
Corel DRAW is a supreme supplier of graphics software, including the popular Corel DRAW program. Corel DRAW has tools that allow the user to both create and edit images. Corel DRAW is the best Desktop publishing software that empowers users to create illustrations containing graphics, text and photographs. Several innovations to vector-based illustration originated with Corel: 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.
Bitmaps can also be
edited more extensively using Corel PhotoPaint, opening the bitmap directly
from Corel and returning to the program after saving.
Corel DRAW Download was originally developed for Microsoft
Windows and currently runs on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7.
So what alternatives are there?
Adobe products cover a wide variety of disciplines - web
design, image and video editing, design and layout and DVD authoring to name
but a few. Alternatives to Adobe PhotoShop
For many years PhotoShop has been the leading image editing
package, but there are plenty of free or paid for alternatives. The CorelDraw
Suite includes Corel PhotoPAINT, which is an incredibly powerful alternative. As
a complete package the CorelDraw Suite offers a formidable arsenal of tools,
but at £479 it's not cheap either. Corel's Painter takes things up a notch,
with native Photoshop file support and excellent brush control, so if you are
serious about 'digital painting' rather than just basic image manipulation then
this with consideration. At the time of writing Corel and bundling Painter as a
free inclusion with CorelDraw suite - normally it'd set you back £275 alone.
Corel PaintShop Pro is their third image editing solution at
a more pocket-friendly £60. The open source GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation
Program) has a rather unorthodox interface for many, but its well supported and
of course free. Alternatives to Adobe Premiere Pro
Adobe's flagship video editing package has ruled the roost on
PCs for some time. Vegas is Sony's higher end product, costing around £400,
however their entry level product, Movie Studio retails for around £60.
There
is an Open Source video editing tool - VideoLAN's VLMC. Alternatives to Adobe
Illustrator
Illustrator is Adobe's vector based DTP software. Starting
again with Corel is the CorelDraw Suite. If you were looking to replace both
Photoshop and Illustrator then Corel ticks both of those boxes with PhotoPAINT
and CorelDraw. Alternatives to Adobe InDesign.
Alternatives to Adobe Dreamweaver
I've used Dreamweaver since version 3, when it was a
Macromedia product. Also, if you use other Adobe products such as Flash or
ColdFusion then Dreamweaver is the ideal enabler for these products. But if you
are just looking for a good HTML editor then there are plenty of free
alternatives to Dreamweaver. Microsoft surprisingly have a free product, called
Expression Web. Another great product is Kompozer, which is open source.
SeaMonkey is more of a suite of applications (including web browser, mail, IRC,
HTML editor and developer tools.
Alternatives to Adobe Flash
For many, Flash is a dying product. Alternatives to Adobe
Fireworks, Adobe stopped developing Fireworks in May 2013. Alternatives to
Adobe After Effects
Blender is a free and well respected open source alternative.
Blender's key features include video editing, 3D modeling, texturing, UV
unwrapping, particle simulation, fluid and smoke simulation, animating, and
compositing.
Alternatives to Adobe Audition
Audition is a sound editing and mixing application. If you
only need to edit a single file, perhaps apply some filters or noise
reductions, then this will widen your suitable application list considerably. On
the Mac the most well-known product is GarageBand. Alternatives to Adobe Encore
Encore is Adobe's DVD authoring suite. Microsoft has one of
the best free alternatives, with Windows DVD maker - a part of Windows Live
Essentials. Corel's Video Studio Ultimate Suite again covers the main functions
of creating menus and subtitles, so if you're replacing Premiere it's a
no-brainer to select it to replace Encore as well. Other notable products
include ManDVD, DVD Flick, Ashampoo Burning Studio.
Photoshop is limited to certain sizes and illustrator too. Pixel
based image are created with digital cameras & scanners and edited in
Photoshop.
CorelDraw was the first drawing that was totally window
based. It was the dominant drawing package on personal It has the capabilities
to make solutions for graphical artists easier, simpler and faster to
understand.
One way to learn Coreldraw is by taking expensive classes,
which will most certainly make you master the program over a long period of
time...
Luckily, today's Internet is full of totally free
alternatives... You can use self-study to master the program by reading one Many
have mastered graphic applications without ever paying a dime.
Coreldraw tutorial directories like this are usually
constantly updated and will automatically keep you up-to-date with the latest
CorelDRAW tutorials that are published over the web.
A different way to find the Coreldraw Tutorial you need, is
by using search engines. However, search engine rankings are delayed and give
higher priority to older published content.
Corel DRAW is a supreme supplier of graphics software, including the popular Corel DRAW program. Corel DRAW has tools that allow the user to both create and edit images. Corel DRAW is the best Desktop publishing software that empowers users to create illustrations containing graphics, text and photographs. Several innovations to vector-based illustration originated with Corel: 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.
Bitmaps can also be
edited more extensively using Corel PhotoPaint, opening the bitmap directly
from Corel and returning to the program after saving.
Corel DRAW Download was originally developed for Microsoft
Windows and currently runs on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7.
Adobe shocked many in May 2013 when they moved from selling
retail box software to their 'Creative Cloud' monthly subscription model
costing £46 per month for individuals - that's over £550 per year. Currently
CS6 sells for around £1200, so that's equivalent to buying the software every
two years. Many people will skip several releases if there are no tangible
benefits, or simply because of the cost. So what alternatives are there?
Adobe products cover a wide variety of disciplines - web
design, image and video editing, design and layout and DVD authoring to name
but a few. The best way to break this down is to look at like-for-like
replacements. There are some products that will be difficult to replace; for
example, if you use Dreamweaver's templates to design a single file that
maintains the look and feel across a website then moving to an alternative HTML
editor will be problematic.
Let's take a look at the key products:
Alternatives to Adobe PhotoShop
For many years PhotoShop has been the leading image editing
package, but there are plenty of free or paid for alternatives. Corel has
several in its portfolio to meet most needs. Paintshop Pro, at around £50 is
the entry level. Painter takes it up a notch, and also supports PhotoShop files,
but at £219 starts to get pricey. The CorelDraw Suite includes Corel
PhotoPAINT, which is an incredibly powerful alternative. It has all of the main
features that you'll generally use, along with a plethora of of filters. The
Smart Carver allows you to easily remove unwanted areas from photos and also
adjust the photo's aspect ratio. As a complete package the CorelDraw Suite
offers a formidable arsenal of tools, but at £479 it's not cheap either.
Corel's Painter takes things up a notch, with native Photoshop file support and
excellent brush control, so if you are serious about 'digital painting' rather
than just basic image manipulation then this with consideration. At the time of
writing Corel and bundling Painter as a free inclusion with CorelDraw suite -
normally it'd set you back £275 alone.
Corel PaintShop Pro is their third image editing solution at
a more pocket-friendly £60. It doesn't have the steep learning curve of the
previous packages, so would be suitable for beginners and intermediates alike.
It comes with all of the usual filters that you're likely to want, such as
Artistic, Film Styles, Black & White and Landscape. A range of 'makeover
tools' allow for easy removal of blemishes, wrinkes and red-eye, and photo
restoration tools such as scratch removal, cloning and fade correction cover
just about all of the correction tools that day to day users are likely to
want.
Outside of the Corel fold there are still several options.
The open source GIMP (GNU Image Manipulation Program) has a rather unorthodox
interface for many, but its well supported and of course free. Paint.net is
another free alternative and prides itself on performing well, even on lower
spec computers, and has an interface not disimillar to Photoshop.
Alternatives to Adobe Premiere Pro
Adobe's flagship video editing package has ruled the roost on
PCs for some time. Apple users have been loyal to Final Cut Pro, but version X
was too dumbed down for many, causing a mass exodus to alternative products.
Sony Vegas did very well out of that! Vegas is Sony's higher end product,
costing around £400, however their entry level product, Movie Studio retails
for around £60. I wanted to get as like for like comparison as I could for the
most reasonable price. After lengthy comparisons I took a look at Corel
VideoStudio X6 Ultimate. In addition to the now standard features of titling
and motion tracking it now includes a plethora of new features, such as support
for Ultra high Definition 4k footage editing, a very powerful titling system
including the renowned Boris Graffiti system, and the ability to produce
content for Blu-ray, DVD and the latest range of smartphones and tablets.
It's
more socially aware too, with the ability to upload to Facebook or YouTube. You
can even create stop motion photography by linking in a DSLR camera. Using the
software was pretty intuitive, and Corel has produced a library of videos on
all major tutorials for those that don't want to wade through a manual. The
Ultimate version retails at £80 inc VAT, with the Pro version (minus a few
features) at £60 - for the extra £20 I'd got Ultimate personally... Pinnacle
Studio is another suite worth considering, which retails for around $60. There
is an Open Source video editing tool - VideoLAN's VLMC. VLMC was not actually
available at the time of writing, but the screenshots suggest a basic
timeline-based editor that should meet the needs of editing those holiday or
mobile videos.
Alternatives to Adobe Illustrator
Illustrator is Adobe's vector based DTP software. Certainly
in publishing circles it's seen as the de facto standard, but there are several
viable alternatives. Starting again with Corel is the CorelDraw Suite. If you
were looking to replace both Photoshop and Illustrator then Corel ticks both of
those boxes with PhotoPAINT and CorelDraw. The shipped DVD comes with an
expansive library of additional tools, templates, cliparts, images and fonts.
Having used both Illustrator and CorelDraw I can say that my preference has
generally been with the latter. The interface is intuitive, the boundaries are
blurred between DTP and image manipulation (as there's a number of image tweaks
and filters that you can apply from within CorelDraw). Moving on to the free
and lower cost route, Inkscape is Open Source and available for both Windows
and Mac which covers most of the features that you'd want, such as opacity and
gradient controls. Serif DrawPlus, Skencil and Xara Xtreme are three others
worth consideration.
Alternatives to Adobe InDesign
Adobe InDesign is a desktop publishing program that can be
used to create various types of content - brochures, magazines, e-books,
posters etc. The lines are a little blurred between InDesign and Illustrator
for many, as either can be used for certain tasks. As such, several of the
products listed above could be suitable, so make a note of your specific
requirements and research each alternative to ensure it meets your needs. If
you have a subscription to Office 365 or have purchased one of the higher end
Office packages then Microsoft Publisher is also a suitable alternative. Quark
Express is another old favourite for many, although pricey at around £800. On
the Open Source side you can try Scribus.
Alternatives to Adobe Dreamweaver
For me this is a tricky one. I've used Dreamweaver since
version 3, when it was a Macromedia product. It's a strong, solid product that
is hard to match. The biggest problem is that if you've written a number of
sites using Dreamweaver then you will undoubtedly have built the site using Dreamweaver's
templating system. Also, if you use other Adobe products such as Flash or
ColdFusion then Dreamweaver is the ideal enabler for these products. But if you
are just looking for a good HTML editor then there are plenty of free
alternatives to Dreamweaver. Microsoft surprisingly have a free product, called
Expression Web. Another great product is Kompozer, which is open source.
SeaMonkey is more of a suite of applications (including web browser, mail, IRC,
HTML editor and developer tools.
Alternatives to Adobe Flash
For most other web requirements HTML5 is replacing Flash,
however if you are not an accomplished HTML/CSS programmer then you are going
to have a very steep learning curve. I use Flash now only to maintain some demo
CD frontends - Flash has the capability to create an executable, which works
well on a CD.
For many, Flash is a dying product. Nobody wants to develop
for a dying product. Alternatives to Adobe Fireworks, Adobe stopped developing
Fireworks in May 2013. Alternatives to Adobe After Effects
Blender is a free and well respected open source alternative.
Blender's key features include video editing, 3D modeling, texturing, UV
unwrapping, particle simulation, fluid and smoke simulation, animating, and
compositing.
Alternatives to Adobe Audition
Audition is a sound editing and mixing application. If you
only need to edit a single file, perhaps apply some filters or noise
reductions, then this will widen your suitable application list considerably. On
the Mac the most well-known product is GarageBand. The open source fraternity
is abundent with options; Audacity, LMSS, Ardour and Traverso DAW are all free
and capable tools.
Alternatives to Adobe Encore
Encore is Adobe's DVD authoring suite. Microsoft has one of
the best free alternatives, with Windows DVD maker - a part of Windows Live
Essentials. Corel's Video Studio Ultimate Suite again covers the main functions
of creating menus and subtitles, so if you're replacing Premiere it's a
no-brainer to select it to replace Encore as well. The Nero suite of
applications also allows you to create DVDs, and has a host of other video and
audio applications besides, so it's worth consideringSony Vegas Platinum
includes both DVD and Blu-Ray authoring, with full menu creation and control.
Other notable products include ManDVD, DVD Flick, Ashampoo Burning Studio.
Photoshop is limited to certain sizes and illustrator too.
Well that is why you should use CorelDraw this graphic design program has no
limited art board in addition to Photoshop or illustrator you can design your
banners of 3 feet x 8 feet or much bigger, edit your taken photos in Photoshop
as usual and import them in your new design in CorelDraw.
Pixel based image are created with digital cameras &
scanners and edited in Photoshop.
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