Wow! Sorry Maya, we were cross posting and I missed your post. Fantastic. Love it.
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Wow! Sorry Maya, we were cross posting and I missed your post. Fantastic. Love it.
Thanks, Egg! :) I had to update the pic as I forgot which one I'd last finished (I always have several ongoing files as I save them separately in case my laptop crashes Xara -- it's a puny computer).
But not puny results :)
Wow to you both!
Gary's newest tutorial made me realize two things: the full potential of the programme and how much I need to learn. This is why I recently started with learning from the workbook tutorials.
Hélène
Attachment 105887Hi Hajeem,
Just take it slowly and methodically. Some of the first Xara users, such as Gary Priester (and me) were "bootstrappers"—we basically had the documentation and CorelDRAW experience to help us better understand Xara's tools and power. But other than thast (and that's not a lot) we were on our own to learn the program, and to help others. And yes, Gary P.'s excellent Workbook series covers a lot of the basic info that you need to eventually grow into and own the program.
It's in the Archives area of Xara Xone, and all you do is to click this link.
Gary Priester's Workbook Xara Xone series
My Best,
Gary
Eric, it seems as though you and Maya are just too fast to address and successfully complete a challenge. I wan to thank you for posting the wireframe view in XAR's native file format so others can eventually learn from it, and your approach and skills.
Interesting things happen when a glass object is brightly lit when it's on a surface: the shadow takes on the color of the glass in places, as you see if you look carefully at the image I posted. If you don't mind, I'd like to take a crack at adding the shadows to the dinner scene.
Maya, your work is astounding, and if this were a real contest, I'd have to disqualify you, not because your work is wrong, but that it's award-winning all the time, and I want to give others a chance to with this hypothetical award.
Wait: I got it. Winners excluding Eric and Maya, for their finished trace get to study with Maya for a week.
I think that's fair. :)
I have another image challenge coming up and it's going to be a little different, and definitely approachable by beginner to intermediate artists.
Attachment 105888
Yes Gary, re the shadow. As stated I'm going to give it a whirl too when I get the time.
On the matter of Combine Shapes:
I attach a simple example xar file showing what occasionally happens when slicing. I can't say it's my experience that Combining either with or without a stroke makes any difference. Have you an example?Quote:
Gary: I’ve not experienced gaps when a “slice and dice” operation is performed, but I’m usually unobservant, so it goes. One thing that creates a gap is having an outline width on any of the shapes to be processed. If, for example, each shape has a 1 point outline, when you do intersect shapes, the product will not have the precise intended dimensions. Always remove outline widths before Boolean-ing.
Hi Eric, I've attached my own Xara file. I did not use Slice because it does indeed produce a weird and undesired product, but to tell you the truth, all these slice and dice features are Boolean operations, and frankly when I first opened Xara, I noted that "Slice" is not in the vocabulary of Boolean ops. It could mean that the vocabulary from the quite limited Boolean phrase book is wrong. The only have stuff such as "A plus B" which is Add, and "A without B" which is subtract. So if the leaf is the desired result, all I did was do an Intersect and the leaf is a valid, proper shape.
I've got an example on page two that shows it you want an array of a specific value of squares, like a chess board, if your source square has an outline, you'll get a different value thean if you create the array with a copy function.
My Best,
Gary
Hi Gary,
Your attachment isn't working :)
Quote:
Weird. I just clicked the ink, and here's the story (in pictures :)):
Attachment 105894
Attachment 105895
I'm attaching a zip here in case the XAR mime type went off the tg forum for some reason, and I did take a cursory which at shading the blue bottle on the table. It's part shadow and part transmitted blue.
Attachment 105896
My Best,
Gary