Corel Draw 11 Graphics Suite Full Version
File Type: RAR
Size: 182.41 MB
Review:
After a long period of consistently failing to keep the Windows 
and Mac versions of CorelDraw Graphics Suite in sync, Corel now looks 
like it has the problem licked. Starting with version 11, the package is
 sold as a single product containing dual-platform CDs and printed 
manuals. The new release also sees a bunch of genuinely useful new tools
 and features, and special optimization for Windows XP and Mac OS X. In 
fact, Mac users will not be able to run it on anything less. First, 
here’s an update on what the version 11 suite actually contains, since 
the content has varied considerably over the years. The suite is a 
collection of three graphics applications aimed at the professional 
designer for print, multimedia and the Web, provided along with a number
 of utility programs, clip art, royalty-free photos, and fonts. The 
pivotal application is CorelDraw 11 – a powerful vector-illustration 
program similar to Adobe Illustrator or Macromedia FreeHand. This is 
joined by Corel Photo-Paint 11, a Photoshop-style paint- and 
bitmap-editing program; and RAVE 2, a Web-animation program. Together, 
the CorelDraw Graphics Suite 11 is akin to buying Adobe Illustrator, 
Photoshop and LiveMotion as a set; or possibly even Macromedia FreeHand,
 Fireworks, and Flash. The big difference is the price: the Corel 
collection will cost you half as much, if not less. Add in the free 
extras, including ScanSoft’s OCR package OmniPage SE and a 
font-management utility, not to mention the vast quantity of clip media,
 and its value for money is compelling. Symbolic gesture The big news of
 the upgrade to CorelDraw 11 is the introduction of ‘symbols’, which is a
 popular concept in other vector-based design software. By copying a 
graphic to a floating Library window, it’s easy to add duplicates of it 
elsewhere in your artwork. But these duplicates are just proxies, so you
 can alter them all globally by changing the original. Corel hasn’t 
taken the concept to Adobe Illustrator extremes with special symbol 
brushes, but the system works, and is usable. Symbols are also respected
 as such when exporting artwork to HTML and Flash formats, keeping file 
sizes down by avoiding duplication of identical graphics. For a more 
original new feature, take a look at the ‘3-point’ drawing tools. These 
offer a fresh approach to drawing vector curves and shapes which may 
appeal to anyone who finds bézier pen tools unnecessarily fussy for 
simple jobs. For example, you can click and drag to create a straight 
line, then when you let go of the mouse button, the line becomes a 
dynamically reshaping curve locked to the cursor until you click once 
again to fix it in position. This is a lovely alternative to fiddling 
with bézier handles or hitting-and-missing with arc tools. If you prefer
 standard pen tools, Corel has upgraded these too. Both the Pen and 
Polyline tools can now draw a mixture of lines and curves without 
forcing you to switch from one tool to another. Also new for CorelDraw 
11 are Roughen and Smudge brushes, which manipulate vector paths 
accordingly to create complex shapes from simple ones. Beyond this, the 
program is treated to a whole host of smaller but interesting 
enhancements such as more path-closing options, more customizable 
snapping, and the ability to convert entire paragraphs of text to vector
 outlines, rather than just one line at a time. Moving on to Corel 
Photo-Paint 11, this has been improved in many ways – even though it 
will never fool you into ditching Photoshop in its favour. Without being
 unfairly harsh, a lot of the new functionality is a case of playing 
catch up, but to its credit, Corel is playing catch up in all the right 
areas. For example, the program now includes the basic elements of Corel
 KnockOut 2 for creating complex but accurate cut-out masks with minimal
 effort. You can now handle Web-image slicing and create JavaScript 
rollover graphics (complete with audio) right within Photo-Paint. Plenty
 of the other advanced filter effects, such as those for lighting and 
lens flares, have been spruced up, too. The digital camera user hasn’t 
been forgotten, either. Photo-Paint 11 includes an all-important Red-Eye
 Removal tool, and the package supports EXIF information saved by the 
camera with your digital shots. It’s also significant that Corel has 
beaten Adobe by being first to market with a mainstream image-editing 
package that can save to JPEG 2000 format, a feature Adobe had to drop 
from the Photoshop Elements 2 launch at the last minute. Web animation 
Last comes the Web animator, RAVE 2. Believe us, this is not a throwaway
 program like its predecessor arguably was. At one level, it’s 
comparable to the original version of Adobe’s LiveMotion, but with the 
might of the CorelDraw 11 art engine at its disposal. This means you can
 create and manipulate original artwork in RAVE using a generous subset 
of CorelDraw tools – something you can’t get close to doing, even in the
 latest releases of LiveMotion and Flash. The program now also features 
set of behaviours to make complex animation and interactive sequences as
 straightforward and code free as possible from the designer’s point of 
view. The Flash export filter has been improved, producing smaller .SWF 
files, and you can preview everything fully within the program without 
being kicked out to your Web browser each time. CorelDraw 11’s symbols 
are also supported. Now for the drawbacks. We experienced some slow 
response and the occasional hang on both computing platforms, but 
especially so under Mac OS X 10.2. Once again, Corel has shuffled bits 
of the interface around in the name of ‘improvement’, yet it remains 
inconsistent between certain component programs. The menu structure is 
as unintuitive as ever, with important features hidden in the most 
unlikely places, such as the floating Manager palettes found under the 
Tools menu, or the important symbols Library window stuck at the bottom 
of a sub-menu halfway down the Edit menu. Countering these issues is the
 fact that the software is extremely powerful while costing not very 
much at all. Existing owners of CorelDraw Graphics Suite 10 might feel 
the upgrade is not essential, but new buyers and those who ignored the 
past few upgrade releases should grab a copy now. Corel is back on track
 and the new CorelDraw exudes confidence.
Download
After Download you have to open setup.exe to install Corel Draw 11.
After Installation Goto location where you have installed the software and open programs and then open coreldrw.exe file.
Create shorcut on desktop to open easilly.

 
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