"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Quote from: mooseman on January 09, 2016, 08:36:56 AMScreen, not sure if you are asking me or the gang. But for my part first what the hell is a power clip. Second this falls white on a black shirt, one color one spot. If you look at the art it is not very even or symmetrical in some spots and it will need some other fluff & stuff but that is about it. Power clips we don't need no stinkin' power clips Thanks for you energymoosemanScreen seemed to be asking the question to Integrity, comparing notes on tchnique.As for "what is a PowerClip"?:PowerClip effectA way of arranging objects that lets you contain one object inside another.PowerClip objectAn object created by placing objects (contents objects) inside other objects (container objects). If the contents object is larger than the container object, the contents object is automatically cropped. Only the contents that fit inside the container object are visible.
Screen, not sure if you are asking me or the gang. But for my part first what the hell is a power clip. Second this falls white on a black shirt, one color one spot. If you look at the art it is not very even or symmetrical in some spots and it will need some other fluff & stuff but that is about it. Power clips we don't need no stinkin' power clips Thanks for you energymooseman
Sorry Mike, that was actually directed to Kingscreen who provided the Vector Magic PDF. Sorry for any confusion.What I meant by the question was - since the power clip provided light top and dark bottom shading on the 2016 and WHEW, how could a usable image be re-created without essentially redrawing since I think you can only add a power clip to something in Corel, not modify it once it's dropped inside.But silly me, perhaps the bi-level shading was supposed to be that way.