Skip to navigation

CorelDRAW X3 Graphics Suite review

Verdict

Built-in tracing and improved drawing, formatting and colour correction make X3 the best CorelDRAW upgrade in years. Overall, though, Illustrator still has the edge

Review Date: 17 Mar 2006

Reviewed By: Tom Arah

Price when reviewed: (£387 inc VAT); Upgrade £149 (£175 inc VAT)

Overall Rating
4 stars out of 6

The problem is trying to persuade non-professional users who aren't pushing the envelope to upgrade. Thankfully for Corel, X3 is indeed the real thing. This is the first release in years that provides CorelDRAW users with new core power that will make a real difference to their everyday working experience, enabling them to produce better work more quickly. But there isn't enough here to lure existing users of Illustrator.

Corel PHOTO-PAINT X3

During its long history, the CorelDRAW Graphics Suite has included various applications for handling business presentations, basic 3D, animation, charting, desktop publishing and more. Nowadays, it's been boiled down to the vector-based DRAW module and the bitmap-based PHOTO-PAINT. This makes the latter more important than ever to the success of the suite as a whole.

As you'd expect, some of its new features are shared with the main CorelDRAW module. There's the new Hints docker that provides information about the current active tool, and a Help menu option to highlight what's changed over the past few releases - which isn't much. More useful is the new Image Adjustment Lab, which doesn't add new power but brings together the most common existing correction commands in one dialog. There's also new support for spot colours, which can be created with the Channels docker and saved to both PHOTO-PAINT CPT and Photoshop PSD formats.

The Cutout Lab for extracting objects from their backgrounds now offers tools to restore and remove detail, an undo capability and the ability to export results as a new layer or as a clipping mask. But that's about it and, to cover over the ever-widening cracks, Corel has had to resort to bundling a cut-down copy of Pixmantec's RawShooter for handling RAW format files - a core capability if ever there was one in the age of the digital camera.

This is disappointing. At one time PHOTO-PAINT was a serious alternative to Photoshop itself, but now it lags behind even Photoshop Elements. The inclusion of, and integration with, PHOTO-PAINT should be the CorelDRAW suite's greatest strength, but only if both stay up to date.

Author: Tom Arah

1 2 3
Subscribe to PC Pro magazine. We'll give you 3 issues for £1 plus a free gift - click here

From around the web

Be the first to comment this article

You need to Login or Register to comment.

(optional)

Latest Graphics / design Reviews
Dynamic Auto-Painter 2.5 review

Dynamic Auto-Painter 2.5

Category: Software
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £32
PostworkShop 2 review

PostworkShop 2

Category: Software
Rating: 6 out of 6
Price: £31
Xara Photo & Graphic Designer 7 review

Xara Photo & Graphic Designer 7

Category: Software
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £70
Real-Draw Pro 5 review

Real-Draw Pro 5

Category: Software
Rating: 5 out of 6
Price: £36
Corel Painter 12 review

Corel Painter 12

Category: Software
Rating: 4 out of 6
Price: £275

advertisement

Most Commented Reviews
More From PC Pro
Latest News Stories Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Blog Posts Subscribe to our RSS Feeds
Latest Features
Latest Real World Computing

advertisement

Sponsored Links
 
 
SEARCH
SIGN UP

Your email:

Your password:

remember me

advertisement


Hitwise Top 10 Website 2010
 
 

PCPro-Computing in the Real World Printed from www.pcpro.co.uk

Register to receive our regular email newsletter at http://www.pcpro.co.uk/registration.

The newsletter contains links to our latest PC news, product reviews, features and how-to guides, plus special offers and competitions.