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  #1  
Old 01-10-2007, 08:38 AM
Steve Ellsworth's Avatar
Steve Ellsworth Steve Ellsworth is offline
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Default vectoring a scan

found this good online tutorial today. should take a lot of the confusion out of vectoring process for those who want to convert their scans. Process would apply to any program.


http://www.islandsign.com/russ/vecto...lustrator.html
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  #2  
Old 01-10-2007, 06:29 PM
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Thanks Steve
More bad weather coming in time to study
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  #3  
Old 01-10-2007, 08:09 PM
jdveritas jdveritas is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Wow, thats a bit more involved than I was thinking..... Is the auto trace function of Corel Draw more like it sounds as far as auto goes, or is it similar to the illustrator method? I would think that a complex design would be an all day chore. Thanks for the heads up, Jim
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  #4  
Old 01-10-2007, 08:30 PM
Andrew Biggs Andrew Biggs is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Thanks for that Steve. Very informative.

Jim........Corel draw auto trace works well for what it is. However if you trace even one scroll you will end up with about 5000 nodes do editing it is out of the question.........however you don't have to. Once the picture is down to the actual size it dosn't matter.

Cheers and once again, thanks Steve.

Andrew
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  #5  
Old 04-15-2007, 11:07 PM
monk monk is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Ellsworth
found this good online tutorial today. should take a lot of the confusion out of vectoring process for those who want to convert their scans. Process would apply to any program.


http://www.islandsign.com/russ/vecto...lustrator.html
hay, coin cutter: where can i find out more about this piece of software ?
looks like something quite useful to me.
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  #6  
Old 04-16-2007, 07:33 AM
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

www.adobe.com
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  #7  
Old 04-16-2007, 11:37 PM
rod rod is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Steve,

This is a good tutorial! Am I right, there is no audio in the tutorial?

For those of us who can always use more insight into Illustrator and Photoshop, etc., there is yet another great website called :

http://www.lynda.com/

...yes, it is a strange name for a vast teaching site, but in fact it is a wonderful site of tutorials on using many different software programs, including graphics and video for both Windows and Mac. You can open it up and check out the style of teaching on quite a few free lessons. They are delivered on Quicktime video streaming, and the teachers are very good. If you want complete access, the cost is $25 for a month...that is about 75 cents a day for 24 hours of teaching if you are an intensive student! You may sign on, and just take a month now and again to do some intensive study.

Lessons are in short Quicktime movies of maybe 10 to 20 minutes each as you learn the skills. You can stop and repeat anywhere in the lesson.

best

Rod
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  #8  
Old 04-17-2007, 08:18 AM
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

if memory server me right it was a silent one
re lynda
been around alongtime i been poking my nose in there for quite a few years and i think i have a few of her disks layingaround somewhere
the name of the site isnt that strange:-)

Lynda Weinman, a Web graphics and design veteran, wrote the very first industry book on Web design, Designing Web Graphics, in 1995. She is a prominent educator and the author of dozens of best-selling books. Weinman was a faculty member at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA, in 1989, and has worked as an animator and motion graphics director in the film special effects industry.

Weinman has worked as a consultant for Adobe, Macromedia, and Microsoft, and has conducted workshops at Disney, Microsoft, Adobe, and Macromedia. She has been a keynote speaker, moderator, and lecturer at numerous design, animation, Web design, and computer-graphics conferences. Weinman and her husband Bruce Heavin co-founded lynda.com, a training company with headquarters in Ojai, CA, in 1995. She co-founded the Flashforward Conference and Film Festival, the largest Adobe Flash® conference in the world, in 2000.

there are many 3rd party programs that do just the vector conversion
most have a downloadable demo
i think adobe streamline is still the easiest to mess with all considered (or flash)
but each to his own
but one of the things i like about illustrator is that if you do a simple convert
like over a bitmap drawing that doesnt print for snot then have illustrator print it it will do a combination of both and the lousiest of bitmaps jpegs or whatever will print nicely down to the small sizes we need for our scale of working

while i have pretty much mastered all the different types of image transfer using inkjet laser etc most of these software packages do me little good in my major area of involvememnt
and too most of these packages are much smarter than i am and way more powerful than i well ever need for engraving purposes
better to find simple programs that dont have all the overhead bloat and complexity to do just what you need - there in lies the challange!


i can draw/scribe the basic image on in a second or two and then once the carving begins all that is soon lost so it becomes a matter of memory

of course when i fall back to 2d art on ivory or metal I use the computer alot or at least i have a good print to look at sitting on the bench - depends on the subject

somethings i am better at than others - i can do an elephant and african scenery standing on my head but doing big cats requires a little help from the computer at times

its always more difficult doing living creatures as people know when you make mistakes. the hardest animal to render on anything with any software package is the infamous human.
Rod
take a look at inkscape and gimp - approaching illustrator and photo shop http://www.linuxlinks.com/Software/Graphics/Drawing/
if you have an old apple or mac running os 10 you might want to dump it for linux and start using all these design goodies for free
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerwork...ry/l-pmac.html
i am converting over some of my older doggier puters to linux and they run quite well - better than they did with windowz in fact
i went nutz the other day and threw it on a lap top
internet flies considering most net servers are freebsd or linux hosts - not having all that windows code in the way makes things very fast
there are shortcomings with drivers but if you ar cleaver you can work it all out
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  #9  
Old 04-17-2007, 08:18 AM
Steve Ellsworth's Avatar
Steve Ellsworth Steve Ellsworth is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

if memory server me right it was a silent one
re lynda
been around alongtime i been poking my nose in there for quite a few years and i think i have a few of her disks layingaround somewhere
the name of the site isnt that strange:-)

Lynda Weinman, a Web graphics and design veteran, wrote the very first industry book on Web design, Designing Web Graphics, in 1995. She is a prominent educator and the author of dozens of best-selling books. Weinman was a faculty member at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA, in 1989, and has worked as an animator and motion graphics director in the film special effects industry.

Weinman has worked as a consultant for Adobe, Macromedia, and Microsoft, and has conducted workshops at Disney, Microsoft, Adobe, and Macromedia. She has been a keynote speaker, moderator, and lecturer at numerous design, animation, Web design, and computer-graphics conferences. Weinman and her husband Bruce Heavin co-founded lynda.com, a training company with headquarters in Ojai, CA, in 1995. She co-founded the Flashforward Conference and Film Festival, the largest Adobe Flash® conference in the world, in 2000.

there are many 3rd party programs that do just the vector conversion
most have a downloadable demo
i think adobe streamline is still the easiest to mess with all considered (or flash)
but each to his own
but one of the things i like about illustrator is that if you do a simple convert
like over a bitmap drawing that doesnt print for snot then have illustrator print it it will do a combination of both and the lousiest of bitmaps jpegs or whatever will print nicely down to the small sizes we need for our scale of working

while i have pretty much mastered all the different types of image transfer using inkjet laser etc most of these software packages do me little good in my major area of involvememnt
and too most of these packages are much smarter than i am and way more powerful than i well ever need for engraving purposes
better to find simple programs that dont have all the overhead bloat and complexity to do just what you need - there in lies the challange!


i can draw/scribe the basic image on in a second or two and then once the carving begins all that is soon lost so it becomes a matter of memory

of course when i fall back to 2d art on ivory or metal I use the computer alot or at least i have a good print to look at sitting on the bench - depends on the subject

somethings i am better at than others - i can do an elephant and african scenery standing on my head but doing big cats requires a little help from the computer at times

its always more difficult doing living creatures as people know when you make mistakes. the hardest animal to render on anything with any software package is the infamous human.
Rod
take a look at inkscape and gimp - approaching illustrator and photo shop http://www.linuxlinks.com/Software/Graphics/Drawing/
if you have an old apple or mac running os 10 you might want to dump it for linux and start using all these design goodies for free
http://www-128.ibm.com/developerwork...ry/l-pmac.html
i am converting over some of my older doggier puters to linux and they run quite well - better than they did with windowz in fact
i went nutz the other day and threw it on a lap top
internet flies considering most net servers are freebsd or linux hosts - not having all that windows code in the way makes things very fast
there are shortcomings with drivers but if you ar cleaver you can work it all out
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  #10  
Old 04-17-2007, 06:06 PM
truehand truehand is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Had to chime in on this one because I'm a long time linux geek. All my computers are PC's with linux *and* window$ loaded so I can boot up either one. The beauty of linux is it comes with a program called Autotrace. With one simple command you can turn a raster image into a vector image.

above is an image of the raster input and vector output. It's pretty efficient with it's use of nodes too Andrew :yesnod: .
This is not the perfect solution, but it's the fastest and I think a bit better than Illustrator or Corel's native autotrace functions. If you have the time, and require perfection, tracing the drawing yourself, as in the tutorial mentioned in this thread, is best.
If anyone wants me to run a drawing through autotrace for them just email me the black and white line drawing and I'll send you back the .ai file. (it wont output corel draw format but I think corel draw will open an Illustrator file? If anyone can confirm that, I'd be interested in knowing)
Any linux questions I would also be happy to address. Linux is the greatest example of the power of sharing (besides this forum ) on earth! just google "copyleft" or "GPL" and you'll see what I mean.
Anyway, I hope that this info is helpful. Lord knows you've all helped me!!
Dave
Please note that I drew the above freehand from Steve's original just for the heck of it.
So if it doesnt look as technically perfect as his, that's why..
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  #11  
Old 04-17-2007, 07:27 PM
Andrew Biggs Andrew Biggs is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Yip, Corel imports ai (Adobe Illustrator) files.

I think the biggest thing to keep in mind with all of this is the computer vectorising is only for a transfer to the metal. Not finished artwork in itself. The actual engraving is the finished artwork!!!

It's also useful for re-sizing, mirroring, repeating and a few other bits and pieces.

Corel, Illustrator, Freehand or whatever, are only tools to get you to a certain stage and carry out certain functions. If the transfer is slightly pixelated or jaggy it dosn't really matter. The most important part is that the scroll backbone provides an acurate line to follow. The more acurate that line is the better the chances are that you can follow it with a graver point.

Another thing to keep in mind is that quite often you have to make small alterations on the job (particulary around the borders) when cutting so putting a huge effort into the computer side of things isn't always productive.

This is my own personal opinion but I try to get my original pencil drawing as accurate as possible. Everything flows from that original drawing. Scan it a 600 dpi using Photoshop, Corel photo paint or whatever. Create a new layer and with a size 2-4 brush copy the outlines (basically a computerised tracing paper) as acuratley as possible. This is where a Wacom tablet is worth it's weight in gold. Get rid of the origanal scan and save the outlines as a black and white bitmap. Auto trace (Vectorise) with Corel Draw (or whatever you use) Resize to fit. Print/transfer and then engrave. I never try to play with the nodes at this stage as there is no point if the previouse steps have been acurate. From the scanning stage to finish it takes about 4-6 hours for a whole gun. Then another zillion hours to engrave.

Cheers
Andrew

Last edited by Andrew Biggs; 04-17-2007 at 07:34 PM.
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  #12  
Old 04-18-2007, 06:21 AM
Tim C Tim C is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

I just bought the Corel about a month ago, it is easy to use and has many features used in engraving.
The auto trace feature is great and works well as far as I have used it.
I’m still learning how to use all the features, but so far a very easy program to learn and a very powerful tool.
To address the scroll question, Coral has a Scroll drawing feature, you pick the number of rotations in the scroll, 1,2,3, or 10, any amount you want.
Then just make the scroll any size you want and position it where you want.

The program comes with 2 tutorials, one video, and the other the standard type as if you were reading instructions out of the manual.
The learning curve to get started is pretty short if you use the tutorials.
I bought a Wacom Art Pen to use with the program and the program has features that are just for using a pen like that.
You can use it to do anything (and more) on the compute, that you can do with a real pen on paper.
These pens also work with Abobe Illustrator, in fact a “trial version “of Adobe comes with the pen.
Tim
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  #13  
Old 04-20-2007, 03:57 PM
monk monk is offline
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Angry Re: vectoring a scan

i use corel v11, and i've fallen, finally, in love with it. but--- the onboard "autotrace"- well if you can't say sumptin nice, don't say nuttin !
nuff said. supposedly the new trace feature is good, but my money is spending elsewhere right now.
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  #14  
Old 04-25-2007, 11:08 AM
monk monk is offline
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Default Re: vectoring a scan

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tim
I just bought the Corel about a month ago, it is easy to use and has many features used in engraving.
The auto trace feature is great and works well as far as I have used it.
I’m still learning how to use all the features, but so far a very easy program to learn and a very powerful tool.
To address the scroll question, Coral has a Scroll drawing feature, you pick the number of rotations in the scroll, 1,2,3, or 10, any amount you want.
Then just make the scroll any size you want and position it where you want.

The program comes with 2 tutorials, one video, and the other the standard type as if you were reading instructions out of the manual.
The learning curve to get started is pretty short if you use the tutorials.
I bought a Wacom Art Pen to use with the program and the program has features that are just for using a pen like that.
You can use it to do anything (and more) on the compute, that you can do with a real pen on paper.
These pens also work with Abobe Illustrator, in fact a “trial version “of Adobe comes with the pen.
Tim
i did a neat lettering job 2 years ago on one of those scrolls. 12" in diameter. there was a romantic type inscription starting in the center and winding all the way out to the outer end of the scroll. the job was on brass. if not for corel, i would never have attempted the layout on that job !
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