I'm taking an online course thru Lynda.com and the instructor is using Adobe Illustrator.
So far, I've been able to duplicate everything he is doing using my copy of Corel 17, until now. I want to know if anyone can figure this out:
He wanted to create a guitar string with the appearance of shading and highlight. He created a simple curved line using the Bezier curve pen tool. Then in the "Appearance" tab, he assigned a color and width. So far, so good.
THEN, with this line still selected, he assigned a second stroke with a lighter color and narrower width and a third stroke with an even lighter color and narrower stroke. He said in case he had to go back and edit it, this method was easier than duplicating the curve two more times, adjusting their attributes, and then grouping them.
I agree, but can CorelDRAW assign three different appearances in just one object, in this case a single line?
I've boasted for over 20 years that Corel can do anything Adobe can do. Please, help me prove it!
Thanx!
Cap10
I looked at the appearance panel and saw nothing that was unable to be done. I'm sure there's something but I didn't see anything.
What the feature does has been explained. What else do you need to see?