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● Leave As One Object mode This option is active by default; if you disable it, the Knife tool cuts an object, but the result is a combined path—in other words, you don’t get two separat

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Types of Cuts with the Knife Tool

There are three ways to cut a shape with the Knife tool, and each one requires a different keyboard/mouse technique

Straight cuts Suppose you want to slice an object into two separate shapes as you’d do with a workshop saw To produce straight lines on sides of both objects, you aim the cursor on the near side of the object, hover until you see it change from

an angled cursor to an upright one, click, release the mouse button, and then click the far side of the object, as shown in Figure 11-5

Freeform cuts This technique can be used, for example, to quickly create an illustration of a sheet of paper roughly torn in half You hover the cursor until it turns upright, click-hold the near side of the object, and then drag until you reach the far side of the shape, as shown in Figure 11-6

Bézier cuts If you need to guide the Knife tool to make smooth jigsaw-like cuts, you holdSHIFT, and then click-drag points, beginning at the near side and

completing the cut at the far side, as shown in Figure 11-7 Notice that not only do the cut result objects inherit the original shape’s fill, but this applies to all types of fills, including gradients The shapes in this figure each have a gradient start and end point inherited from the original shape, and if you choose the Interactive gradient tool, you can adjust each object’s gradient directly and come up with a visually interesting jigsaw puzzle composition or other complex drawing

FIGURE 11-5 Click, release, then click to create a Knife tool straight cut

Knife is over

an object.

Knife is not over an object.

Click and then release.

Click

Resulting straight-cut objects

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Naturally, if you have a specific cut in mind, you’ll get the best results using the shaping

operations, and you cannot edit a Bézier cut’s path as you make the cut, but the Knife tool

does provide fast and easy results

If you hold both SHIFT and CTRL while click-dragging to make a Bézier cut, doing

so constrains the direction of the path to 15-degree increments for more predictable

FIGURE 11-6 Click-drag to create a freeform cut

FIGURE 11-7 Bézier cuts guide the Knife tool with the precision of using a digitizing tablet

and stylus

Hold SHIFT and drag Cut objects inherit the original

object fill and outline.

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Setting Knife Tool Behavior

Using the Knife tool results in just what you’d expect—several objects out of a single one However, you do have options, the two property bar options shown here Each of these options toggles on and off to suit a specific cutting requirement

Auto-Close On Cut mode This option, on by default, sets the Knife tool to create closed-path objects following any style of Knife tool cutting If you turn this option off, the Knife tool divides an object into two open paths and removes any fill This can be a useful mode for breaking a closed shape into open paths To use this option, don’t drag with the Knife tool, but instead click a near point and a far point

Leave As One Object mode This option is active by default; if you disable it, the Knife tool cuts an object, but the result is a combined path—in other words, you don’t get two separate objects This option is useful on occasions (for creating characters in typefaces, for example), but it probably would not be an everyday mode of operation for your work

Both the Eraser and Knife tools can be used on imported bitmaps; you can perform

a little photo retouching with these tools exactly as you would with vector objects The only restriction is that a bitmap (BMP, TIFF, JPEG, and so on) has to actually

be imported to the document; if it is externally linked, the tools can’t be used on this reference to bitmap images.

Using the Eraser Tool

The Eraser tool, shown next, completely removes areas of selected objects you click-drag over—just like a real art eraser, but without the stubble landing in your lap The Eraser tool comes in two different shapes, and you can define the size by using the property bar You’ll find it in the toolbox grouped with the Knife, Virtual Segment Delete, and Crop tools

Eraser tool

Eraser tool cursors

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Working with Eraser Operations

With this tool, you can remove portions of shapes in four ways:

Double-clicking When you double-click a selected shape, you remove an area that

is the shape of the cursor Therefore, if you double-click a lot with the circular

cursor chosen, you can quickly design a slice of Swiss cheese

Single-click two points If you single-click, move your cursor, and then click a

second time, the Eraser tool erases a straight line through the selected object

Click-drag This is the most common method of erasing, and the results are totally

predictable If you click-drag, you erase the area you’ve dragged over on a selected

object

Grouped objects do not qualify for use with the Eraser tool However, if you CTRL

-click an object in a group to temporarily isolate it, you can indeed erase part of the

object.

Hovering and pressing TAB This technique creates several connected straight-line

segments, and after you get the hang of it, it will feel like you’re painting with an

eraser, and you’ll be able to quickly produce phenomenally expressive and complex

drawings

Walk through the following tutorial to see the power of this hover-TABerasing technique

and to make it your own

Power Erasing

1. Open Don’t Litter.cdr, an incomplete international symbol that tells the audience,

“Put refuse in the appropriate place; don’t be a pig.” The orange areas are guides for

you; they’re locked on the Guides layer

2. Select the main object Choose the Eraser tool and then set the nib style to rectangular

by clicking the default nib style (the circle) on the property bar For this example, set

the nib size to about 18".

3. Single-click at the top left of the wastebasket guide Move your cursor over to the

bottom left of the wastebasket guide, but don’t click Notice as you move the Eraser

tool that a path preview follows the cursor

4. PressTAB, but don’t click your mouse button Notice that a new erasure appears

between the first single-click point and the point where you pressedTAB

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5. To define a third point, move your cursor to a new point (without clicking the mouse button) and then pressTABagain A third point is defined, and the path between the second and third points is erased To stop using the Eraser tool, click at the end to halt CorelDRAW from connecting the points you click with a line between them

6. When you’re done with the wastebasket, set the nib style to round, and then add limbs to the thoughtful international guy Use theTABtechnique, for example, to extend a forearm from the guy’s shoulder, and once this segment has been erased, double-click where you think his hand would be to extend the erasure Single-click

to end an erasure Figure 11-8 shows the work in progress

Each time the Eraser tool cursor is clicked to erase portions of your object, CorelDRAW considers the action as a unique and separate erase session This means that Eraser tool actions can be reversed using the Undo command ( CTRL+Z )

in steps, depending on which erase technique was used While using the single-click technique, an Undo command is needed to reverse each erase point During a continuous erase using the click-drag action, a single Undo command reverses each continuous erasing session.

Setting Eraser Tool Properties

The width and shape of the Eraser tool are set using property bar options, as shown next The complexity of the removed shape, the number of path segments, and the connecting nodes created during an erase session can also be controlled These properties significantly affect the shape of erased object areas

FIGURE 11-8 PressTABto define intermediate points between your first and last erase-path

points to create connected, straight-line erasures

Single-click

Pressing TAB defines points; single-clicking defines end.

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As with most of the toolbox tools, you can get to the options for the Eraser tool in

Options by double-clicking the button on the toolbox.

Eraser Width

Width can be set between 0.001 and 100.0 inches either by entering values in the property

bar combo box or by pressing theUPandDOWN ARROWkeys on your keyboard to increase

or decrease the size Naturally, you might never need a 100-inch eraser; it makes more sense

to use the shaping operations—but you do have this latitude

Use the keyboard to change the cursor size while you erase Press the UP ARROW

and/or DOWN ARROW key while click-dragging, and the result can be a tapered

brush, as shown here After you release the mouse button, the Eraser tool resets to

its original size, so you don’t have to worry about starting out a new erase stroke

with a yard-wide tip!

Reduce Nodes Mode

Erasing continuous paths removes portions of objects to create new sides that are made up of

normal vector path segments and nodes How closely the new edges follow your erase path

is determined by the number and properties of the nodes that are produced The more nodes,

the more complex and accurate the erased shape will be While selected, the Reduce Nodes

option affects the complexity of the resulting erased shape when erasing in continuous

freehand-style paths

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Eraser Width Reduce Nodes

Eraser Shape

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Adding nodes to an already-complicated object, however, can create an overly complex object, something that can slow you down—the excess nodes don’t contribute to the artwork and may result in inconvenient screen redraws of effects you might apply The Reduce Nodes option lets you reduce the complexity of erased area shapes at the price of what’s usually trivial inaccuracy To activate the Reduce Nodes option, click the button to the depressed position (the default), or deactivate it by clicking it to the undepressed state

The Eraser tool’s Reduce Nodes settings are set according to the Freehand smoothing default setting used by the Freehand and Bézier tools, which can be set between 0 and 100 percent (the default is 50) To set this option, double-click the Eraser tool button on the toolbox By default, it’s enabled.

Using the Virtual Segment Delete Tool

The Virtual Segment Delete tool is used to delete specific portions of objects, specifically, overlapping areas Additionally, this tool removes portions of an object’s path where they

intersect paths of other overlapping objects.

To use this tool to delete path segments where an object intersects itself, use these quick steps:

1. With the Freehand tool, draw a path that loops around and crosses itself

2. Hold your cursor over the segment to delete—you don’t need to have the objects selected to use this tool You’ll notice the cursor becomes upright when an eligible segment is hovered over (shown at top here)

3. Click the cursor directly on the segment you want to delete The segment you targeted is immediately deleted

After deleting portions of a path with this tool, what remains is either an open curve with just one path, or a compound curve with two or more subpaths For example, if the object

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you’re deleting segments from is a closed path, deleting one segment will result in an open

curve Deleting a segment from a rectangle, ellipse, or polygon object will convert the

resulting shape to curves and remove the dynamic object properties To delete segments that

are hidden behind an overlapping object, temporarily set its Fill to None

If the object you are deleting segments from is a compound path (an object

composed of more than one open or closed path), the Virtual Segment Delete tool

will work best if the object is first broken into individual curves using the Break

Apart ( CTRL+K ) command.

Cropping an Illustration

The Crop tool, located in the group with the Knife and the Eraser tools, brings a bitmap

effect to vector drawing If you have experience with Corel PHOTO-PAINT or another

photo-editing program, you already are familiar with a crop tool: you select an area within a

photo, perform a command such as clicking inside the crop area, and the area outside the

crop is deleted and the image is resized

The Crop tool in CorelDRAW behaves exactly like an image editor’s crop tool Objects

do not have to be grouped; you just drag a rectangle around the area of your design you want

cropped, double-click inside the proposed crop area, and all object areas outside the crop

box are deleted In Figure 11-9 at left you can see two objects: the goal is to leave only the

comedy mask and to get rid of the tragedy mask In the middle the Crop tool is dragged

around the desired area, which then is double-clicked At right you can see two separate

objects: the cropped gray background and the cropped mask This is a powerful and

potentially very destructive tool, but fortunately you can work with the proposed crop box

before cropping You can drag a corner crop box handle before cropping to proportionately

resize the crop; dragging a middle handle disproportionately resizes the crop area.

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FIGURE 11-9 The Crop tool removes all areas of every object that lies outside the crop box

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Additionally, once you’ve made a proposed crop, clicking, then clicking again inside the box puts the box in rotation mode, and you can actually crop a diamond shape If you want to cancel a crop operation, pressESCand the crop box goes away

Using the Smudge Brush

The Smudge brush tool is yet another paint tool in a drawing program: not only is this tool a lot of fun to use, but you can also dramatically alter shapes in a natural, painterly fashion whose results would take hours using any other method You move areas of a vector object

by dragging from a starting point inside the object, dragging outward, or by starting outside and dragging inside the object The result is a smear, but with all the crispness of a vector design You’ll find the Smudge brush, shown next, in the toolbox, grouped with the

Roughen brush, the Shape, and Free Transform tools

Applying Smudge to Shapes

Using the Smudge brush, you can alter the outline shapes of open or closed paths by click-dragging across the outline path, in either an outward direction (to add a bulge) or an inward direction (to create a pucker) As you drag, the path is altered according to your drag action and to the shape settings of the Smudge brush cursor Figure 11-10 shows a creative example

of using the Smudge brush: the cartoon head has long, spiky hair now; the editing took less than 5 seconds, and the resulting path can be edited for refining by using the Shape tool and other CorelDRAW features

If you’re trying to smudge shapes that have been applied with an effect (Envelope, Blend, Contour, Distortion, Extrude, or Drop Shadow), you’ll first need to break apart the effect If the shape is part of a group, you’ll need to ungroup it first ( CTRL+U ) Smudging cannot be applied to bitmaps.

Choosing Smudge Brush Property Bar Options

In case you haven’t noticed, the Smudge brush works quite differently from other tools You can control how the Smudge brush effect is applied by varying tool properties such as the

Smudge Brush

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tilt, angle, and size of the nib; or by adjusting how quickly the effect diminishes; or by using

optional pressure stylus settings

While the Smudge brush is selected, the property bar offers these options for controlling

the shape and condition of your Smudge brush cursor:

Changing each of these options has the following effect:

Nib Size Nib Size can be set between 0.02 and 2.0"; the default is 0.1"

Pen Pressure If you have a digitizing tablet and stylus that supports pressure,

choose this option to have the Smudge brush react to pressure you apply while

increasing the width of the nib

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FIGURE 11-10 The Smudge brush treats vector objects as though they’re made of liquid

Nib Size

Pen Pressure Dryout Tilt Bearing

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