Possible to automate CorelDRAW to PhotoPAINT and back?

I've avoided using PhotoPAINT for nearly thirty years and am entirely unfamiliar with it, but I now have a situation where it is the perfect tool for the job.

Here's the situation:

- In CorelDRAW I've placed an image of a garment on a white background.

- I will then select the image and Edit Bitmap which will open the image in PhotoPAINT.

- Next, use Magic Wand Mask and select the white background.

- Go to Mask and Invert.

- Next, Copy and Paste, then delete the original layer.

- Now we'll Save which brings the image back into CorelDRAW with the overall bitmap now trimmed to the size of the garment in the photo.

- This is then resized to approximately full size so that a logo can be properly sized.

Question: Is it possible to record a macro that will do this process?

Parents Reply
  • The end result is that the garment is essentially in a clipping shape that matches the outline of the garment as opposed to simply making the white background transparent. The way I understand it, they do this in order to enlarge the "clipped" image to approximate actual size.

    OK, think I get it. What they would get in CorelDRAW would still be a bitmap where the background had been made transparent, but that would also have had any "excess" background clipped off on the top, bottom, left, and right sides.

    I can view those as two separate goals:

    • Make the background transparent (because the end result somewhere down the line is going to be placed on top of something other than a white background).
    • Scale the bitmap so that some feature in the image has the correct "real world" dimensions in CorelDRAW.

    The second one - scaling an object based on some known real world dimension - can be accomplished very easily using my Match Vectors macro.

    If you would like to see a short demo video, then it would be great if you could share a representative image, along with a real world size for some feature in the image (e.g., "from Point A to Point B would be 45 cm in the real world"). It does not need to be a horizontal or vertical measurement; could just as well be described by a diagonal line.

Children
No Data