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#11
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Corel Photopaint
On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 00:20:42 -0500, nospam
wrote: In article , Eric Stevens wrote: Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop. One I remember was when filling a page with photographs of various sizes all you had to do was open a blank page and drag and drop image files on the page. They would open on the page and could be variously sized and arranged to suit. I did whole albums that way. Very quick You still can't do that in PS. that can be done in photoshop, with each photo in a different layer. As far as I know, you can't drag and drop them. You have to open them and then copy them. Only once you have done that can you paste them in the page. false. drag/drop works perfectly fine. You are right. The first time I tried it, it didn't work and I haven't tried it since. then you did something wrong, and as usual, blamed the tools rather than anything you did. Nevertheless, while I can drag an image around with the cursor, and resize it from its initial dimensions, once I have dropped it (clicked tick) I still cannot resize the image with the the cursor. then you're doing something wrong. It's now nearly as good as Paintshop Pro but it hasn't quite got there yet. photoshop was never intended to be a page layout app, ... Maybe that's the reason it is not as quick and easy to do these things with Photoshop. ... nor are other image editors. Which should not be construed as meaning _all_ other image editors. try indesign, pages or many other options, which *were* designed for page layout. pick the best tool for the job. Paintshop Pro is quite a good one. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#12
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Corel Photopaint
On 3/17/2019 12:19 AM, Eric Stevens wrote:
On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 23:08:12 -0400, Tony Cooper wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 15:12:28 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 18:37:58 -0500, nospam wrote: In article , Eric Stevens wrote: Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop. One I remember was when filling a page with photographs of various sizes all you had to do was open a blank page and drag and drop image files on the page. They would open on the page and could be variously sized and arranged to suit. I did whole albums that way. Very quick You still can't do that in PS. that can be done in photoshop, with each photo in a different layer. As far as I know, you can't drag and drop them. You have to open them and then copy them. Only once you have done that can you paste them in the page. I have an old version of CorelDraw, and that's the only thing I use if for. I haven't tried drag and drop, but bring in .jpgs using "Import". The imported .jpg can be resized and placed. If an over-lapping style for several photos is used, each can be placed partially over or partially under another image. It's easy to make a collage of several images. Text can be added. Agreed - its quick and easy. I tried to post the following before but Dropbox wouldn't show it. Maybe the A3 size gave it indigestion? Nevertheless you might like to download it and look at it. Its an album cover collage made from several different maps shots (not all to quite the same scale on the image) with thumbnails showing where various photographs in the album were taken. https://www.dropbox.com/s/4dytwggjin...Cover.jpg?dl=0 The same thing can be done in PS, but it's much easier in CorelDraw. Constructing the album cover would still be much more clumsy/tedious/troublesome in Photoshop. Getting the scales of the map sections to match would be particularly difficult. Inkscape (free) is also a vector program that works about the same, but I haven't worked with it. I needed an .svg file once, so I downloaded it. These are comparisons of the wrong apps, so the layout tasks being described are also incomparable. Paint is roughly equivalent to Photoshop, both work with bitmap images and neither are intended for layout. CorelDraw is roughly equivalent to Adobe Illustrator, both are vector-based apps that can adjust position and size of bitmap images placed on their pages for print layouts. -- best regards, Neil |
#13
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Corel Photopaint
In article , Eric Stevens
wrote: It's now nearly as good as Paintshop Pro but it hasn't quite got there yet. photoshop was never intended to be a page layout app, ... Maybe that's the reason it is not as quick and easy to do these things with Photoshop. or any other image editor. ... nor are other image editors. Which should not be construed as meaning _all_ other image editors. image editors are designed to be image editors, not page layout apps. that doesn't mean they can't be made to do page layout, but they are far from ideal. try indesign, pages or many other options, which *were* designed for page layout. pick the best tool for the job. Paintshop Pro is quite a good one. not for page layout, it isn't. |
#14
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Corel Photopaint
In article , Neil
wrote: The same thing can be done in PS, but it's much easier in CorelDraw. Constructing the album cover would still be much more clumsy/tedious/troublesome in Photoshop. Getting the scales of the map sections to match would be particularly difficult. Inkscape (free) is also a vector program that works about the same, but I haven't worked with it. I needed an .svg file once, so I downloaded it. These are comparisons of the wrong apps, so the layout tasks being described are also incomparable. Paint is roughly equivalent to Photoshop, both work with bitmap images and neither are intended for layout. true, but it can still be done to a limited extent. CorelDraw is roughly equivalent to Adobe Illustrator, both are vector-based apps that can adjust position and size of bitmap images placed on their pages for print layouts. as can photoshop, however, they aren't designed for page layout. |
#15
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Corel Photopaint
On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 07:14:53 -0400, Neil
wrote: On 3/17/2019 12:19 AM, Eric Stevens wrote: On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 23:08:12 -0400, Tony Cooper wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 15:12:28 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 18:37:58 -0500, nospam wrote: In article , Eric Stevens wrote: Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop. One I remember was when filling a page with photographs of various sizes all you had to do was open a blank page and drag and drop image files on the page. They would open on the page and could be variously sized and arranged to suit. I did whole albums that way. Very quick You still can't do that in PS. that can be done in photoshop, with each photo in a different layer. As far as I know, you can't drag and drop them. You have to open them and then copy them. Only once you have done that can you paste them in the page. I have an old version of CorelDraw, and that's the only thing I use if for. I haven't tried drag and drop, but bring in .jpgs using "Import". The imported .jpg can be resized and placed. If an over-lapping style for several photos is used, each can be placed partially over or partially under another image. It's easy to make a collage of several images. Text can be added. Agreed - its quick and easy. I tried to post the following before but Dropbox wouldn't show it. Maybe the A3 size gave it indigestion? Nevertheless you might like to download it and look at it. Its an album cover collage made from several different maps shots (not all to quite the same scale on the image) with thumbnails showing where various photographs in the album were taken. https://www.dropbox.com/s/4dytwggjin...Cover.jpg?dl=0 The same thing can be done in PS, but it's much easier in CorelDraw. Constructing the album cover would still be much more clumsy/tedious/troublesome in Photoshop. Getting the scales of the map sections to match would be particularly difficult. Inkscape (free) is also a vector program that works about the same, but I haven't worked with it. I needed an .svg file once, so I downloaded it. These are comparisons of the wrong apps, so the layout tasks being described are also incomparable. Paint is roughly equivalent to Photoshop, both work with bitmap images and neither are intended for layout. CorelDraw is roughly equivalent to Adobe Illustrator, both are vector-based apps that can adjust position and size of bitmap images placed on their pages for print layouts. I wasn't comparing CorelDraw to Photo-Paint. I was commenting on how I use CorelDraw. The Corel Graphics Suite that I have has each in separate modules, but I've never used the Photo-Paint module. "Paint" is "Microsoft Paint" and has come with Windows since 1985. It is not at all even roughly comparable to PS. I haven't bothered to look it up, but I think it's no longer automatically included, but can be added at the Microsoft Store. Too many "Paint"s: Photo-Paint, PaintShop Pro, Paint, Painter...and probably more. The last time I used anything except PS/LR for image editing was when the best thing available was JASC's program. That was the first of what is now Corel's PaintShop Pro versions. The original JASC app was simple and free. -- Tony Cooper - Orlando, Florida |
#16
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Corel Photopaint
On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 07:14:53 -0400, Neil
wrote: On 3/17/2019 12:19 AM, Eric Stevens wrote: On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 23:08:12 -0400, Tony Cooper wrote: On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 15:12:28 +1300, Eric Stevens wrote: On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 18:37:58 -0500, nospam wrote: In article , Eric Stevens wrote: Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop. One I remember was when filling a page with photographs of various sizes all you had to do was open a blank page and drag and drop image files on the page. They would open on the page and could be variously sized and arranged to suit. I did whole albums that way. Very quick You still can't do that in PS. that can be done in photoshop, with each photo in a different layer. As far as I know, you can't drag and drop them. You have to open them and then copy them. Only once you have done that can you paste them in the page. I have an old version of CorelDraw, and that's the only thing I use if for. I haven't tried drag and drop, but bring in .jpgs using "Import". The imported .jpg can be resized and placed. If an over-lapping style for several photos is used, each can be placed partially over or partially under another image. It's easy to make a collage of several images. Text can be added. Agreed - its quick and easy. I tried to post the following before but Dropbox wouldn't show it. Maybe the A3 size gave it indigestion? Nevertheless you might like to download it and look at it. Its an album cover collage made from several different maps shots (not all to quite the same scale on the image) with thumbnails showing where various photographs in the album were taken. https://www.dropbox.com/s/4dytwggjin...Cover.jpg?dl=0 The same thing can be done in PS, but it's much easier in CorelDraw. Constructing the album cover would still be much more clumsy/tedious/troublesome in Photoshop. Getting the scales of the map sections to match would be particularly difficult. Inkscape (free) is also a vector program that works about the same, but I haven't worked with it. I needed an .svg file once, so I downloaded it. These are comparisons of the wrong apps, so the layout tasks being described are also incomparable. Paint is roughly equivalent to Photoshop, both work with bitmap images and neither are intended for layout. CorelDraw is roughly equivalent to Adobe Illustrator, both are vector-based apps that can adjust position and size of bitmap images placed on their pages for print layouts. This sub-thread started with RichA writing "Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop." I responded and all this has followed. Whhether or not what I have described is a key image function is another matter. Certainly I have found it so. In any case it contains an example of how Paintshop Pro can be easier to work with than Photoshop. It extends to other areas too. -- Regards, Eric Stevens |
#17
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Corel Photopaint
On 3/16/2019 6:17 PM, Eric Stevens wrote:
On Sat, 16 Mar 2019 07:47:30 -0700 (PDT), RichA wrote: On Saturday, 16 March 2019 06:58:41 UTC-4, RJH wrote: Room for this: https://www.coreldraw.com/en/pages/photo-paint/ in anyone's life?! I remember the Corel Suite from the 90s on Windows - quite capable IIRC. -- Cheers, Rob Paint Shop Pro was a good image program. More straightforward with key image functions than Photo Shop. One I remember was when filling a page with photographs of various sizes all you had to do was open a blank page and drag and drop image files on the page. They would open on the page and could be variously sized and arranged to suit. I did whole albums that way. Very quick You still can't do that in PS. I would show examples but Dropbox seems to balk at my A3 JPGs. All done in PS. There may be other programs that will do it, but it worked. https://www.dropbox.com/s/cpr1w0618obffd5/museum%20Dahlias.jpg?dl=0 -- PeterN |
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