![]() ![]() Sometimes this involves "faking" a rendering for elevations/floor plans, adjusting the ouput from a rendering, and other times it is just to show a before/after of a project renovations. I stick mainly with Photoshop for tweaking colors, adding fills and other graphic controls that I cannot achieve either due to speed or other reasons in Autocad/ADT. I have not used Corel Draw so I cannot give an unbiased comparison. I wonder what is the latest trend to do such things now? >I usually use Corel draw to import Autocad drawings to do presentation Also, any sort ofĬomplex operation like a gradient fill ballooned the side of the fileīecause of these and other problems, I've since done my illustrationsīy plotting to EPS, and using both Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop for Really, really unstable, especially with printing. Editing things in CorelĪfter the import can be very painful, because of the way AutoCADĮntities become grouped in Corel - they have almost no relationship toĪnd, I've found that Draw 10 was a complete mess, and 11 is still However, it's still very much a one-way trip. Nice that closed plines become closed shapes in Draw, enabling you toĮasily fill the areas by doing more pre-processing work in AUtoCAD I liked the fact that everything's still in a vector format. Version 6, importing AutoCAD drawings in a number of different ways. I don't know if it's the latest trend I've used Corel Draw since
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