Dear Corel UsersWhen I trace an image in CorelDRAW (v15), I get of course a banding of colors, but unfortunately the regions with different colors are displayed with very thin white lines as borders. This look is retained when published to pdf. How can I get rid of these white borders?
I attach a photo for you to see ...
Regards,
Erik
Helo Erik; I guess one way would be to brake the object a part and delete or change the color to match the color next to it. I think you could use the eye dropper tool to get the color you want to use.
George
Hi.
This macro will fix it. After trace select result and run.
http://www.gdgmacros.com/helpful_vba_code_details.php?codeID=3
~John
Maybe because when you hit the plus sign or key. The offset is not really 0. It would be maybe .000001, but we don't notice it. This very tiny offset makes the white line disappear. What I normally do I duplicate it when everything is final then convert it to a bitmap.
Alex Galvez said:Maybe because when you hit the plus sign or key. The offset is not really 0.
I think I understand the behavior now. I still hope that CorelDRAW will correct it in a future version, even if the rendering will take a little extra time. Even though I don't use it much, I have Illustrator installed on my computer. I tested it: Illustrator doesn't show the same problem with partly white borders ... Thanks for alle the replies!
Erik Vestergaard said:I still hope that CorelDRAW will correct it in a future version, even if the rendering will take a little extra time.
I think duplicating is a bad workaround. Use any of the macros above which add an hairline outline to each shape that matches fill color. This is what should be done, not duplicating.
RunFlaCruiser said: Hi. I think duplicating is a bad workaround. Use any of the macros above which add an hairline outline to each shape that matches fill color. This is what should be done, not duplicating. ~John
Same difference?