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CorelDRAW Essentials 2
A Cheap Way to Get Top Software?
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Info |
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Product: |
CorelDRAW
Essentials 2 |
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From: |
Corel |
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Web: |
www.corel.co.uk
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Price: |
£56 |
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Rating: |
8/10 |
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We like: |
CorelDraw, some
good photo effects, training materials, PDF output |
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We don’t like: |
Photo-Album very
basic |
CorelDRAW Essentials 2 bundles CorelDRAW with
PhotoBook, a photo manipulation package and Photo-Album, a
cataloguing and outputting tool. For good measure the box includes
100,000 bits of clip-art and some tutorials on CD. It's an odd
combination though. On the one hand, anyone who is used to tools of
the calibre of the core product CorelDRAW will find the other parts
of the bundle rather lacklustre whilst those who will appreciate the
other applications i.e. digital photographers will probably find
CorelDRAW overkill for any drawing needs they may have. Let’s look
at each item in turn.
CorelDRAW
The most important part of the package is CorelDRAW
itself. Whilst the full version of CorelDRAW is currently at version
12, the version supplied here is the earlier although still highly
capable version 9. You have a choice of starting from a blank canvas
or using one of a number of templates such as calendars, awards and
so on. CorelDRAW is hugely powerful and can take a long time to get
proficient at. Corel have wisely included some CD based training
from Lynda.com as well as the usual online help and some additional
online hand holding. However, total beginners may benefit from
buying a 3rd party book to get to grips with all that is here.
It’s impossible to do CorelDRAW justice in a short
review. Suffice to say, it features almost everything you would want
in a vector drawing package and then some. The range of tools and
options is legendary. Even this slightly older version is fully
capable of truly professional results. Most effects are real time so
you can adjust things to see how they would look without having to
wait for any rendering.
As well as drawing, it can be used as a capable DTP
package taking multicolumn layouts in its stride making it ideal for
newsletters, stationary and the like. The 250 supplied fonts help
provide interest here. On the output side you can choose from a
range including such industry standards as EPS and PDF. Usefully
there are optimisations for producing images for web pages to help
produce compact files.
Photobook
Photobook is less clear cut. It’s all too easy to
compare it to Adobe Photoshop Elements which is in a similar market
and is superior in many respects. Photobook does have a few tricks
up its sleeve though. We managed some quite nifty special effects
using Photobook which would have been far harder work with Elements.
We particularly liked the Light Studio function which uses a range
of presets to create some truly creative effects. After some
experimentation we’d say that Photobook definitely has something to
offer people who may already own similar programs. A bonus is that
it appears to work with most (all?) Photoshop Plug-ins which expands
its capabilities hugely. We tried a few and they all worked fine.

Photo-Album
Photo-Album is really not too good. It allows you to
select a series of images and then perform some basic adjustments
before outputting them in various ways from CD to web slide show.
The slide show has one layout only and that’s pretty dull. We got
marginally excited by the option to create a screen saver. It even
had a few options to play with. The finished result was a jerky and
unattractive horror that went straight in the bin though. Our advice
would be to ignore this program and get the free version of Adobe’s
Photoshop Album.
Conclusion
CorelDRAW Elements is very much a mixed bag. The
main program, CorelDRAW itself is superb and will delight all who
use it. Experts will enjoy the wide ranging tools whilst beginners
can get going via the usable set of templates. Photobook on the
other hand does have some weaknesses but does include some neat
functionality that will appeal to the more creative photographer who
wants to give their images some real interest. Finally,
Photo-Album. Bin it. If you need to upgrade an old version of
CorelDRAW and fancy some extra tools for your digital photos then
CorelDRAW Essentials 2 is the bundle for you. If CorelDRAW itself is
of no interest then you should strongly consider buying Photobook on
its own which at £25 is very good value for money.
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Min Hardware Specs |
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Processor |
200Mhz |
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RAM |
64Mb |
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HD Space |
160Mb |
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Graphics Resolution |
1024x768 |
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Other |
Win 2000/XP |
Iain Laskey
^top
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