Improve composition by cropping images, or correct crooked photos interactively with the Straighten tool. Use Smart Carver to edit without distorting content, and stitch images together to create a single, large image.

Use the interactive Perspective Correction tool to adjust the perspective of buildings, landmarks, or objects in photos. You can also easily remove pincushion and barrel distortions introduced by your camera lens.


Photo To Paint


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Corel PHOTO-PAINT includes special effects filters and camera effects that let you apply an array of transformations to images. Try AI-powered Art Style effects to transform photos into paintings, abstract art, and more.

Apply brushstrokes to images that imitate watercolors, felt markers, and more. Or paint with bitmaps using the Image Sprayer tool. Use a pen or stylus to vary the brushstroke appearance with pressure, tilt, bearing, and rotation.

Corel PHOTO-PAINT is an image-editing application included in CorelDRAW Graphics Suite. With PHOTO-PAINT you can adjust, enhance and retouch photos, as well as create original bitmap illustrations, composite images and paintings. This tutorial will provide a tour of the workspace and demonstrate some basic features.

Check to see if you inadvertently selected the Color Replacement tool, which is on the same flyout as the Paintbrush tool. IF you do not have Use Shift Key to cycle tool groups checked in Preferences>Tools, then each time you use the keyboard shortcut to select the paintbrush tool it will cycle through all the brushes on that tool group.

On image (1), why not invert the layer Layer > Invert, then use Filters > Colours > Erase white paper, then layer > invert again to get a transparent layer with the blue hoop on. Then create a new mask and paint black onto the mask to hide parts of the hoop.

Creating a real oil painting takes patience. It can take up to a week for the finished product to dry! But with our Oil Painting effects, all you need is about 5 seconds. Then, simply adjust the Amount of the effect and edit your painting as you would any other photo. Exaggerate your favorite aspects of an oil painting to really make it pop!

This photo to painting tool will help you connect the dots on your next project. By using a spotting technique, it transforms colors and creates a striking image with a full range of tones and textures.

One advantage that may be had in PhotoPaint is the ability to size pictures very easily in print preview mode. It may be that you can do that in photoshop, but people on many of these forums who use photoshop seem to spend their time chasing around upsampling and downsampling and setting dpi and ppi all to get a correct sized print (and just a 4x6 print in some cases too). Not needed in Corel PhotoPaint.

Chris Beney

9 was a perfectly respectable version. Go for it.

One advantage that may be had in PhotoPaint is the ability to size

pictures very easily in print preview mode. It may be that you can

do that in photoshop, but people on many of these forums who use

photoshop seem to spend their time chasing around upsampling and

downsampling and setting dpi and ppi all to get a correct sized

print (and just a 4x6 print in some cases too). Not needed in Corel

PhotoPaint.

Chris Beney

It also comes with CorelDraw, which I use a tremendous amount for posters and newsletter and so on. Also for laid out photos when I want graphics more complex than I can do on the otherwise excellent PhotoRecord that comes with Canon cameras.

Chris Beney

I've been working with photoshop since Version 1. As far as features, plugijns, versatility and sheer power are concerned, nothing can touch it. If you're a hobbyist, fine, use Corel, but if you want professional results quickly, stick with Photoshop.

Yes conceded. It's a well known fact - even to those of us who haven't used these programs before - that Photo Paint came out before Photoshop, and it was a strong rival to it up until the mid (late?) 90s. The name screams amateur to you, but to me, I know that "paint" means a bitmap program, as opposed to a vector program.

I'm a photopaint user. I'm using gasp version 8. I use this since it was the bitmap editor that came packaged with CorelDraw, which I used for work from V5 to 8. We also had Canvas and Photoshop as the vector and bitmap software on the office macs.

I can't speak cogently on the current version's relative strengths and weaknesses, as my knowledge is several versions old. However, based on 1999 versions, photoshop and photopaint are able competetors. When you invest your time to learn software, you get good at it and are hesitant to exchange your efficiency for something else. When you are making that first decision, what you want to avoid is spending the time to learn the quirks of crappy software. Corel PhotoPaint is not crappy software. It is class software. And as an added bonus, it comes with CorelDraw in case you ever need to do any vector or mixed vector/bitmap/text work. Once you've used CorelDraw, you'll never again use powerpoint. Ever.

People can talk all they want about powerpoint, but it is crappy software. Excell is great for crunching numbers, but once you need to plot data, you need Origin. If you need to annotate the graph and combine it with other text/images, you need CorelDraw or some other bitmap-capable, vector graphics program. If you do any work with graphics, you need a vector and a bitmap editor. I guess you could get Illustrator and Photoshop if you want to spend the bucks. I personally like the corel software, and I think that the dated versions offer outstanding value. I've seen V9 for $30 on e-bay. I don't see why you should need to spend $500 for the photoshop/illustrator combo when you can get the CorelDraw/PhotoPaint combo, which is marginally equivalent on a feature-feature basis, for so much less $. Plus, it's nice to have a common interface for both programs. It's the graphics equivalent to 'Office'.

One bit of functionality that my version of photopaint lacks that is present in photoshop has to do with the unsharp mask controls. There are 3...radius, threshold, and percentage. Only integers may be entered in these fields. Apparently in Photoshop, decimal numbers can be entered. This comes up when people talk about using a 1.5 radius. In PhotoPaint it's either 1 or 2.

Another thing that I wish PhotoPaint could do (but I think that photoshop also lacks this) is to apply "effects" to a 48-bit image. Instead, images need to be coverted to 24-bit before unsharp mask can be applied. The levels/curves/hue/saturation/etc can all be adjusted in 48-bit mode, but the pixel moving effects (blur/sharpen/artistic effects) cannot be applied until the image is converted to 24-bit.

About Corel Draw vs Powerpoint...I've only ever used Powerpoint at school to do simple presentations - brief text on simple backgrounds to support what I'm talking about, the odd photo, I think once a graph generated on Exel...is this the sort of thing you would do on Corel Draw, or would Corel Draw be overkill?

I'm a photopaint user. I'm using gasp version 8. I use this

since it was the bitmap editor that came packaged with CorelDraw,

which I used for work from V5 to 8. We also had Canvas and

Photoshop as the vector and bitmap software on the office macs.

I can't speak cogently on the current version's relative strengths

and weaknesses, as my knowledge is several versions old. However,

based on 1999 versions, photoshop and photopaint are able

competetors. When you invest your time to learn software, you get

good at it and are hesitant to exchange your efficiency for

something else. When you are making that first decision, what you

want to avoid is spending the time to learn the quirks of crappy

software. Corel PhotoPaint is not crappy software. It is class

software. And as an added bonus, it comes with CorelDraw in case

you ever need to do any vector or mixed vector/bitmap/text work.

Once you've used CorelDraw, you'll never again use powerpoint.

Ever.

People can talk all they want about powerpoint, but it is crappy

software. Excell is great for crunching numbers, but once you need

to plot data, you need Origin. If you need to annotate the graph

and combine it with other text/images, you need CorelDraw or some

other bitmap-capable, vector graphics program. If you do any work

with graphics, you need a vector and a bitmap editor. I guess you

could get Illustrator and Photoshop if you want to spend the bucks.

I personally like the corel software, and I think that the dated

versions offer outstanding value. I've seen V9 for $30 on e-bay.

I don't see why you should need to spend $500 for the

photoshop/illustrator combo when you can get the

CorelDraw/PhotoPaint combo, which is marginally equivalent on a

feature-feature basis, for so much less $. Plus, it's nice to have

a common interface for both programs. It's the graphics equivalent

to 'Office'.

One bit of functionality that my version of photopaint lacks that

is present in photoshop has to do with the unsharp mask controls.

There are 3...radius, threshold, and percentage. Only integers may

be entered in these fields. Apparently in Photoshop, decimal

numbers can be entered. This comes up when people talk about using

a 1.5 radius. In PhotoPaint it's either 1 or 2. ff782bc1db

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