Hi, I have been working in coreldraw for years but recently purchased a Boss Laser which runs on LightBurn. Extremely new to using Lightburn and am having issues when i convert a file over. I am using the lightburn Macro I found online which i believes convers the file to a SVG? Unsure if I have settings setup incorrectly but the image is not coming over correctly for me. I will include two images (first will be from corel draw *everything in my corel files that are black are laser etched away with the laser. Everything white is raised of left untouched) Second image will be how it is being brought over to LightBurn. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Here is a lightburn file. The smaller one is me just copying and pasting directly from having CorelDraw open and pasting into Lightburn. Coming over in the incorrect size but at least showing the design correctly with the two outlines around the 2.

Nashville Fire.lbrn2 (111.5 KB)


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I am new to affinity Designer and Publisher. I have a Coreldraw 2020 file that has been used for creating a business card. I want to fully convert this into either Designer or Publisher for ongoing use.

The logos are created using individual vector objects. Refer attached screen shot of Coredraw layers and objects. How to I bring the vector objects into Affinity? and is it best to use Designer or Publisher for this situation?

As I understand things at thw moment there are issues with CDR importing into affinity. There have been a couple of discussions about this and unless I am mistaken, it can not be done directly. CDR like affinity extension is a proprietry format and is not easily accessible except to Adobe illustrator and a few others. I am not totally familiar with the technical things on this subject, but becasue of my lack of knowedge n this area with corel draw, I would simply save/export your files into an SVG, PDF, and EPS and see what happens, affinity of course handles these files. There are those who have extensive knowledge on these matters, I am only answering from off the top of my head - I hope you understand.

A dashed line made out of vector rectangles is roughly the same number of steps in Illustrator (one step conversion) - Josh was trying for a literal dashed line - single stroke, broken into individual lines with gaps in between. (The brush application, followed by Expanding the object - 2 steps - works like a charm.)

Having used educational licenses to both CorelDraw (late 1990s) and Illustrator (early 2000s), when I started getting serious about making money from graphic design (late 2000s), I put a lot of effort into deciding which of the two to purchase. Being equally interested in designing for print, screen, vinyl cutters, screen printing, and CNC routers (and maybe someday laser engravers), CorelDraw came out on top. Both are good products. But, as @Jules said, CorelDraw just seemed to acknowledge non-screen/print uses more.

Hi All, i had been using coreldraw to cut with prior to this, as we all know that can be hit or miss, now i have bought a new cutter, and it came with vinyl master cut, im not real smooth with vinyl master yet, its a struggle.

when i pasted the pdf into corel draw some of the lines were lined up or connected completely, went ahead and spent some time fixing that within coreldraw, only for it to do the same thing in vinylmaster when i pasted into vinylmaster.

first question is why didn't you export the autocad file as a dxf? then import that into corel draw to make the other changes you wanted (or just create it in corel draw to start with. then export that file as a .eps and IMPORT it into vinylmaster. not sure about you but I have not had consistent results ever copy and pasting them between programs and that is why they have the export and import to preserve the integrity of the file. I am guessing you design on corel as you are proficient in that and unable to do some things you can do in corel then . . . sure seems like a long way around but if it works - just don't copy and paste

yes, i almost always start a design in corel, its just easier in my opinion. i hate to say this, but i always copy and past, and usually have good luck with it, but i have never imported a file into vinylmaster. i will give this a shot and see what happens.

One of the things you need to be careful of when using DXF files, is that sometimes the line segments are actually split into hundreds of single lines that look like they join up, but each is loaded in as a separate object.

3D programs use splines and other mechanisms that are not available in 2D programs. You can get a great many unwanted results bringing in a dxf file into a 2d vector graphic environment. Curves and circles might get converted to line segments, some paths may not be closed and other strangeness may follow.

If you can get back into Corel, I suggest saving all your work as SVG files, there should be a batch conversion macro to make it less cumbersome. Inkscape can open some Corel files, but the svg format is native and more reliable.

Besides Ventura Publisher was a full-featured Page Layout program which ran beautifully in GEM, with more features than Aldus Pagemaker running on Apple gear. I had found a Postscript emulator named Freedom of Press that ran great with a few scripted memory swaps combined with the Intel Edge Memory card upgrade increased print resolution to 600 x 1200 on my HP Laserjet for stunning printouts, equal or better than the Mac fanatics at fraction of the cost in hardware and software.

The reason I design in CYMK colors in my Roland Printers uses CYMK ink cartridges. I know that is what Rip software in for but the colors never would print correctly when I designed in RBG colors. After a great deal of trial and error I consuled a friend with a Degree in Graphics and explained my problem and he told me just to design in CYMK and it worked fine until now when I want to use Inkscape but unless I can figure out a way to import my images into Inkscape I may be forced to stay with CorelDraw.

What is the correct sequence of actions to convert PNG file in SVG format in Corel Draw? I import the image into a new file, then export it (selected only) into SVG format. But as a result I get very low-quality image, much worse than PNG.

In 1987, Corel engineers Michel Bouillon and Pat Beirne undertook to develop a vector-based illustration program to bundle with their desktop publishing systems. That program, CorelDraw, was initially released in 1989.[1] CorelDraw 1.x and 2.x ran under Windows 2.x and 3.0. CorelDraw 3.0 came into its own with Microsoft's release of Windows 3.1. The inclusion of TrueType in Windows 3.1 transformed CorelDraw into a serious illustration program capable of using system-installed outline fonts without requiring third-party software such as Adobe Type Manager; paired with a photo-editing program (Corel Photo-Paint), a font manager, Corel Capture, and several other pieces of software, it was also part of the first all-in-one graphics suite.[2]

CorelDRAW was originally developed for Microsoft Windows 2.1, and versions existed for Windows 3.1x, CTOS, OS/2, and Power Macintosh. With the release of Corel Linux, CorelDRAW 9 was released with package support for Debian and Red Hat-based Linux.[47] Version 11 was released for Mac OS X in 2001, but was then discontinued on both Linux and Mac. CorelDRAW was available only for Windows until the 2019 version became the first to support macOS.[48][49][50]

Some tips I wouls give you is take your design to a local printers such as UPS or FedEx and you could order a single run proof. I would also look into a CMYK color book to know what CMYK values you should use and it helps in the color calibration.

For CorelDRAW users, we have a macro available to simplify and speed up the process of sending work to LightBurn. Whether or not you have the macro installed, you can still export your work as an AI or SVG file and import into LightBurn. The macro only works on Windows computers.

The Torchmate 4000 TC is your entry into pipe and tube cutting. Designed to work as an attachment to the Torchmate 4000 series CNC plasma tables, this machine is plug and play and interfaces seamlessly with your existing machine. This machine can cut 1.5 in to 6 in schedule 40 pipe - and can handle a maximum pipe length of 7 ft. The head is capable of cutting pipe with a bevel angle up to 45 degrees.

If the image consists of multiple shapes, It will be necessary to put them into the correct cut sequence before saving into HPGL or DXF format, depending on whether you are using our DOS or Windows based driver electronics & software.

One thing you can do to place a base under the lettering is to draw a rectangle under the letters that is just slightly overlapping their bases. Then, using a photo editing software package, white out the areas where the lines overlap to make the base and letters look like one piece. Then export the image as a windows bitmap. Import it into OCR trace and convert it to black and white. In doing this, play with the threshold value until the gaps are closed. Then trace the object using the centerline trace method.

After tracing the letters, they may be slightly distorted. To fix this, import the file into CorelDraw in CMX format, and use the node editing tool to straighten any rough lines, etc. The voluminous on-disk documentation goes into great detail on each aspect of this. After doing it a few times and committing the process to memory, it can be done very quickly. ff782bc1db

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