That's pretty cool, I never used the Powerclip before....that works great!
....... ARE YOU KIDDIN' ME? never used it before? oooooooh man.... how do you scale photos? I gotta tell ya, I've found that the powerclip is one of the the most helpful features in CorelDraw for my work flow. I'm a powerclippin' fool...........
TIP:
To scale images with CorelDraw's powerclip:
When taking a photo, --- a vehicle for instance --- measure the length of the door from edge to edge. (It's protocol for our shop to consistently measure horizontally below the door handles.)
Once the image is imported into CorelDraw, simply draw a rectangle from the edges you've measured and "powerclip" the image to the rectangle.
In the menu bar, type your measurement into the scale box --- constrained proportions. Then extract the powerclip. Your door will be scaled to actual size. ...no muss, no fuss and best of all no old time scale and reduction wheel to find.
WARNING: It's been awhile since I set up CorelDraw at the shop, but I think the powerclip is set to center the image by default. Somewhere in the "Tools/ Options" there is a checkbox that needs to be unchecked for the powerclip to clip exactly what you've surrounded with your rectangle.
---I don't have CorelDraw on my home computer to figure out where it's at.
oooooh ooooh, here's another trick with the powerclip...
Say you need to mask that old run down sign on the side of a building in your photo. Duplicate the photo, then draw a shape --- a rectangle for arguments sake --- over an area of the building that doesn't have the sign. Powerclip your duplicate photo to the rectangle, then move that over that old run down sign in the original image. From there, you can mock up your new and improved sign over the composite of photos to woo and wow your customer with no remnants of the old sign.
hope that makes sense....