Hey thanks !, I was just flying through it and I could've done some things differently , I also noticed I missed the tool bar - my bad, it was kind of done in a hurry as the sign will be installed this Saturday...I am not a Corel user but thanks for sharing, nice work on redrawing.
Hi , great point, to answer your question , it is faster and it gives me more control to smooth the curves individually, this is the process I adopted long time ago and I stick to my guns, I do work in illustrator as well on occasion , but anything like this logo redraw I can do much faster in corel than illustrator, not saying illustrator is a bad vector application , it's just my own preference.Yes... why do you draw all of the curved lines as straight segments and then go in and change to curves afterwards? It is easier in Corel to do it this way? When I trace curves in Illustrator I just draw the lines as curves as I am tracing. No need to go back in and change them. I am not criticizing you as I have seen others do it this way in Coreldraw
No one no how uses quick trace. At least anyone who wants to be taken seriously. You no doubt are patting yourself on the back but before you break your arm doing so you might want to cognizant of a couple of facts. First the thing you called a 'logo' is utterly indeterminate as to exactly what it was when it started out life. Second, and ergo, any decent smooth trace is inarguably as good as any other.
Corel has a reasonably protean trace facility but 'fast trace' isn't a part of it. You have to use the actual trace tool and, often, diddle the various parameters. Unless your dealing with a Rorschach test image it will usually produce a trace that would be every bit as accurate as the product of all of the nonsense you went through. Remember the actual image is indeterminate so a good trace is the equal of what you did. Both you and Corel are guessing at what is an edge and where, exactly, is that edge. And it's a damn sight faster.
You might have a go at Corel X8. It can do a decent job even on the aforementioned Rorschach test image.
Bob, any trace tool perhaps will do good for a billboard print viewable from 40 ft up, what I did is a router path , print and contour cut , it is an interior sign and it will be wall mounted at eye level, any imperfections would be visible...
another thing is to auto trace you need a good file to start with , the file I worked from looked like it was hand drawn while traveling on a train in the middle of the night lol,
Quality path , vector artwork has to be produced as quality vector graphic and that process does not allow for shortcuts, unless like I mentioned earlier when you produce a 40 ft billboard or a large trailer wrap.
Regarding corel X8 or X7 it will not help your work quality, I would obtain a better quality result working in early corel 3 than trying to autotrace in X8.
50 minute time is not that bad after all , now I have a crisp logo I can use for any future application.
take care !
Perhaps your reading for comprehension skills are not as developed as they might be. What part of 'indeterminate' do you not understand?
One more time, I'll type slowly try to follow along. Since the original image is indeterminate any vector interpretation of that image is merely someone's guess as to just where any original component vector might have been. That guess could be made via a decent algorithm or via your excruciatingly painful process and not case could be made for one versus the other.
Just so you know, I've been doing this sort of thing since your parents were making in there pants, don't attempt to school me on the nature of images and the specifications for their various and sundry uses. Moreover I've been dealing with Corel since it was first released, probably back before you were born, and am reasonably familiar with it in most all it's myriad of versions.
I'll type slowly try to follow along.
bob is 100% right on here. i too have been a corel user since version 3.0, on a 386 DX40, high powered computer of the day)))))))))))))) 3 had a trace, 4 didnt, 5 & 6 were garbage, 7.0 was the only true corel. it had a trace, not so good. version 8.0 corel took a program named XARA and incorporated a bunch of it it into corel 8.0 and above. as for the trace it is good from then on. like anything else...........it takes time to learn to make function well.
i had a hand scanner on the old 386DX, would do a 4" wide scan)))))wasnt till 7 was i able to afford a flatbed scanner. $300 wasa great deal and SCUSSI. the pre-input to USB....
one of the best trace was a program called STREAMLINE 4.0 it can still be d/l for free. i like it for its ability to clean up before trace...
INKSCAPE has pretty decent trace......
bob is 100% right on here. i too have been a corel user since version 3.0, on a 386 DX40, high powered computer of the day)))))))))))))) 3 had a trace, 4 didnt, 5 & 6 were garbage, 7.0 was the only true corel. it had a trace, not so good. version 8.0 corel took a program named XARA and incorporated a bunch of it it into corel 8.0 and above. as for the trace it is good from then on. like anything else...........it takes time to learn to make function well.
i had a hand scanner on the old 386DX, would do a 4" wide scan)))))wasnt till 7 was i able to afford a flatbed scanner. $300 wasa great deal and SCUSSI. the pre-input to USB....
one of the best trace was a program called STREAMLINE 4.0 it can still be d/l for free. i like it for its ability to clean up before trace...
INKSCAPE has pretty decent trace......
Sorry friend but I can assure you that you can not produce a precise symmetrical auto trace vector path from an insufficient image, does not matter what computer or trace tool you are using..
It just isn't happening, been there done that many times..., we usually redraw poor quality logos produced by sloppy designers or amateurs, I see it every day, I spent fair amount of time using vector software, see you are talking 386 DX 40 lol ok , well try commodore 64 and art studio, if you wanna go that far back...
As I replied to Bob, auto trace would work for just a large format digital print viewable from a distance not from a hand reach, it's an interior sign that calls for precision and esthetics, I can't supply my client with garbage contour it would be visible as black on white. Regardless ,
I enjoyed redrawing this logo as I will use it for future projects and I will feel confident that my client will be 100% satisfied, if you think this process is painful, do not draw anything just use clip art.
bob, why do you get this Sheldonesque attitude towards obtuse and silly people...
...But, Morph1 is proud of his work ethics and made a video to show his skills in CorelDraw, and there are hundreds of these on Youtube for people to learn from. So I applaud his sharing of his skills and it gives us a little insight to his art talents.