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Corel Painter Essentials 4 (Win/Mac)

Corel Painter Essentials 4 (Win/Mac)

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From: Corel
Category: Software

List Price: $99.00
Buy New: $58.99
You Save: $40.01 (40%)



New (24) Used (2) from $49.99

Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 90 reviews
Sales Rank: 604

Format: Cd-rom
Platforms: Macintosh, Windows
Media: CD-ROM
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Operating System: Macintosh
Shipping Weight (lbs): 3
Dimensions (in): 9 x 7.8 x 2

MPN: PE4ENPCM
Model: PE4ENPCM
UPC: 735163116373
EAN: 0735163116373

Release Date: October 16, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • The simple-to-use home art studio that makes it easy for you to draw, paint or turn your photos into paintings--the ideal way to get started with digital art
  • Enhanced Photo Painting System reduces the complexity of turning a photo into a painting
  • Incredible selection of brushes, paints, pens and paper textures for adding unique touches to photos or creating cards, scrapbooks and other fun projects
  • Compatible with Intel and PowerPC Macs, Windows Vista, the entire Wacom product line, and major photo-editing applications
  • Tutorial-based guidebook and accompanying video tutorials/sample files teach you the application while you complete fun, instructional projects

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Corel Painter Essentials 4 is the simple-to-use home art studio that makes it easy for you to draw, paint or turn your photos into paintings. Two new workspaces put the tools you need at your fingertips, whether you're turning a photo into a painting, or drawing and painting on a blank canvas. Plus, Corel Painter Essentials 4 includes an incredible selection of brushes, paints, pens and paper textures for adding unique touches to photos or creating cards, scrapbooks and other fun projects. Based on the world's most powerful painting and illustration software, Corel Painter, it's the ideal way to get started with digital art!

Discover an Expressive, Natural, and Inspiring Home Art Studio
For Corel Painter Essentials 4, the application workspace has been completely redesigned to improve color selection and the discovery of brushes, media, and paper. The new workspace is also easier for users to navigate, especially if they work with a pen tablet.

Corel Painter Essentials 4 is the simple-to-use home art studio that makes it easy for you to draw, paint or turn your photos into paintings.

With Corel Painter Essentials 4, it's now even easier for users to turn photos into expressive, natural, hand-painted portraits.

New--Redesigned workspace:
Corel worked closely with its customers to find out how they were using Painter Essentials. The result is a redesigned and simplified environment with two distinct workspaces: Drawing & Painting and Photo Painting. Each workspace is easily accessible from tabs within the application, and each presents users with the tools specifically needed for the task they've selected.

In the Drawing & Painting workspace, users can access relevant tools, such as the Colors, Color Wheel, and Layers palettes. In the Photo Painting workspace, users are provided with the Source Image, Auto-Painting, and Restore Detail palettes. Both workspaces offer a reconfigured toolbox that makes it easier to identify and select brushes, media, and paper.

New--Brush Drawer:
With Corel Painter Essentials 4, a new Brush Drawer has been added to the toolbox, making brush identification and selection easier than ever before. The Brush Drawer opens with the click of a flyout button. Redesigned icons for each brush category are displayed on tabs along the top of the Brush Drawer. The list of available brushes changes depending on the selected brush category. When closed, the Brush Drawer displays a column from which users can quickly access their most recently used brushes. For convenience, users can also easily add their favorite brushes to the Brush Drawer column.

New--Mixer palette:
In addition to its traditional Color Wheel, Corel Painter Essentials 4 now provides the Mixer palette. By simulating the traditional experience of mixing colors on an artist's paint palette, the Mixer palette makes it easier for users to get the precise color they want. Users can apply two or more colors to the Mixer pad, and then blend the colors together until they are satisfied with the result.

New--Colors palette:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 provides the new Colors palette, which lets users choose a color with just one click.

New--Easier pen tablet navigation:
With its new workspaces, Corel Painter Essentials 4 makes it easier for pen tablet users to navigate. Many of the application's buttons and sliders are larger and easier to grab. In addition, the controls for frequent actions, such as Undo and Redo, have been better exposed so that users can access them without using a keyboard.

New--Professional prints:
Accessible from the File menu, the new Online Print Services option lets users get professional prints on canvas, watercolor paper, or other fine art materials.

In the Drawing & Painting workspace, users can access relevant tools, such as the Colors, Color Wheel, and Layers palettes.

In the Photo Painting workspace, users are provided with the Source Image, Auto-Painting, and Restore Detail palettes.

The Corel Painter Essentials 4 Guidebook provides step-by-step tutorials that help users discover the application while completing fun projects.

Turn Photos into Paintings
With Corel Painter Essentials 4, it's now even easier for users to turn photos into expressive, natural, hand-painted portraits.

New & Enhanced! Photo Painting System:
The Photo Painting System has been redesigned and enhanced, reducing the complexity of turning a photo into a painting. With Corel Painter Essentials 4, the streamlined Photo Painting System is now available as a separate workspace. All brushes within the Photo Painting workspace act as cloners and take their color from the source image.

The new Source Image palette makes it simpler to choose a clone source, and includes controls to adjust the opacity of tracing paper and to toggle tracing paper on and off. In addition, the source image is now saved with the painting, meaning that users do not have to keep a separate photo open. The enhanced Auto-Painting palette now includes Smart Stroke technology, which provides more intelligent brush behavior during the auto-painting process.

New & Enhanced--Smart Stroke technology:
Built into the Auto-Painting palette, the new Smart Stroke technology paints with brushstrokes that follow the forms of the original photo. Smart Stroke technology dynamically changes brush size, stroke length, and pressure, based on the detail and focal areas of the original photo, which helps users quickly achieve impressive paintings or sketches.

New--Source image saved with file:
Previously, if users wanted to continue working on a Photo Painting project, they needed to remember which image file had been used as the source. With Corel Painter Essentials 4, the source image is now saved with the RIFF file, making it easier to return to a project later.

Try the Broader Selection of Natural-Media Materials
Painter has always led the way with its unrivaled selection of Natural-Media materials. With Corel Painter Essentials 4, users get access to an even greater selection of Natural-Media brushes, pens, and paper textures.

New--RealBristle Painting System:
First introduced by Corel Painter X, the new RealBristle Painting System heightens the responsiveness of the brush for the artist and represents a major milestone for digital painting. With Corel Painter Essentials 4, users get access to several RealBristle brushes in a variety of brush categories. Brushes that use RealBristle technology are identified by the prefix "Real" in their name. By authentically reproducing the sensation of the interaction between the paint, canvas, and brush, RealBristle brushes take realism to a whole new level.

New--Charcoal brushes:
The new Charcoal brushes range from pencils to hard or soft charcoal sticks. As with other dry media brushes, the opacity is linked to pen pressure.

New--Sargent brush:
The new Sargent brush in Corel Painter Essentials 4 helps users paint in the style of master artist John Singer Sargent.

New--Pens:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 introduces pens in the Pencils & Pens brush category, such as the Scratchboard Tool and Smooth Edge Calligraphy, which are perfect for inking comic books or doing calligraphy

New--Sumi-e brushes:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 has added Sumi-e brushes, which let you create flowing sumi-e-style brushstrokes.

New--Paper textures:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 includes a greater selection of paper textures that accurately reproduce the feel of using traditional art materials. Users can control the texture of the canvas to achieve the results expected from using traditional media on a given surface--for example, pencil on watercolor paper, felt pens on cotton paper, or chalk on the sidewalk.

Explore Learning Materials
Getting started with Corel Painter Essentials and digital art has never been simpler. Users can take advantage of inspiring, tutorial-based videos and a companion guidebook, in addition to the application's Help system.

New--Tutorial-based guidebook:
The Corel Painter Essentials 4 Guidebook provides step-by-step tutorials that help users discover the application while completing fun projects. With projects ranging from beginner to advanced levels, the guidebook introduces various Corel Painter Essentials media and provides tips that introduce some of the elements and principles of art.

New--Video tutorials:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 includes video tutorials that are accessible from within the application. Users benefit by learning from the experience of Painter Master and Ambassador John Derry. The video tutorials guide users through a variety of projects, including those in the guidebook.

Brushes--The Heart and Soul of Corel Painter Essentials.

Enjoy Compatibility
Users who work with the latest operating system from Apple or Microsoft can rely on the compatibility features of Corel Painter Essentials 4. The application is designed to work with the industry-standard software and hardware that digital artists and hobbyists use every day.

New--Universal binary:
While still providing a great experience with PowerPC processors, Corel Painter Essentials 4 is optimized for use with Intel processors.

Enhanced! Windows Vista support:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 Works with Windows Vista.

Enhanced! Support for Wacom products:
Corel Painter Essentials 4 supports the entire Wacom product line, including the Graphire pen tablets, the Cintiq 21 UX interactive pen display, the Intuos3 pen tablet, and the Wacom 6D Art Pen.

Natural-Media Brushes
Brushes are the heart and soul of Corel Painter Essentials. The following sections explain how brushes and media are organized within the application.

Thick Paint
Thick Paint brushes let users simulate painting with thick, sticky paints, such as acrylics and oils. All Thick Paint brushes cover underlying brushstrokes. Many of the brushes can produce multicolored strokes, and others interact with underlying pixels to create realistic effects. The Thick Paint category includes Acrylics, Artists' Oils, Impasto, Oils, Palette Knives, and RealBristle brushes.

Thin Paint
Thin Paint brushes let users simulate the application of thin paint or ink, such as thin acrylic, oil paint, gouache, or Sumi-e ink. All Thin Paint brushes cover underlying brushstrokes. The Thin Paint category includes Acrylics, Gouache, Oils, RealBristle, and Sumi-e brushes.

Water
There are two classes of Water brushes: watercolor brushes and airbrushes. Users must dry both airbrush and watercolor brushstrokes before applying effects. Watercolor brushes produce watercolor effects that react with the canvas texture. With the exception of the Wet Eraser, the width of watercolor brushstrokes is affected by stylus pressure. In previous versions of Corel Painter Essentials, the Watercolor brushes were referred to as Digital Watercolor. Airbrushes apply fine sprays of color. The Digital Airbrush carefully mirrors the feel of a real airbrush. The Wacom airbrush stylus is fully compatible with the airbrushes in Corel Painter Essentials.

Pencils & Pens
Brushes in the Pencils & Pens category are marking tools that simulate pencils, ballpoint pens, markers, and calligraphy pens. Just like their traditional counterparts, the pencils in the Pencils & Pens category interact with canvas texture and are great for a variety of artwork--from rough sketches to fine line drawings. The pencils and the Felt Art Marker build to black and link opacity to stylus pressure. Dragging quickly with a Pencils brush produces a thinner line, while dragging slowly leaves a thicker line. Pens, such as the Round Tip Pen and Scratchboard Tool, create realistic effects without the drawbacks of traditional pens, which can clog, spatter, or run dry.

Dry Media
Dry Media brushes range from charcoal and chalk to pastels and crayons. The opacity of Dry Media brushstrokes is linked to stylus pressure and all strokes interact with the paper texture. These brushes range from hard styles that reveal the paper grain to soft styles that glide on to completely cover existing brushstrokes. The Dry Media category includes Charcoal, Chalk, Crayons, and Pastels.

Blenders
Blenders brushes affect underlying pixels by moving and mixing them. Blenders can reproduce the effects of blending paint by applying water or oil. Blenders can be used to smooth drawing lines and create shading just like a traditional pencil sketch or charcoal drawing.

Effects
There are three types of Effects brushes: Artist brushes, Image Hoses, and Pattern Pens.

Artist brushes let users paint in the styles of master artists, such as Vincent Van Gogh (with brushstrokes that are multishaded), or Georges Seurat (with multiple dots combining to form an image).

Image Hoses are special brushes that apply images, instead of color, to the canvas. The images that these brushes "paint" with come from special image files called nozzles. Each nozzle file contains multiple images. The Variable-Size Image Hose varies the size of images as you paint. The Variable-Angle Image Hose varies the angle at which the images are applied.

Brushes in the Pattern Pens category apply a pattern to an image. Users can vary the size and transparency of the pattern.

Photo
Photo brushes are based on popular brushes from other brush categories, but are optimized for auto-painting.


Customer Reviews:   Read 85 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars Econo-Paint for Budget Artists   December 18, 2008
Brian M. Ranzoni (Albany, OR United States)
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

I'm a cheapskate when it comes to PC applications, so I've spent much of my artistic career on bundled programs. I still draw and edit in Microsoft's generic "Paint" program. And when I bought a camera that included a "Limited Edition" of Adobe Photoshop 5.0, I loaded it up eagerly--only to find the interface clunky and disorienting. I don't manipulate my digital pictures very much, because they tend to have satisfactory hue, saturation, and values from the outset, and I'm not into gimmicks like stain-glass filters.

I needed something oriented more towards free-drawing, but with more intuitive photo styling for those rare occasions. So naturally I checked out Corel's latest budget art program, Painter Essentials 4.

Right off the bat, PE4 is light years ahead of Vista's Paint program, and noticeably superior to my old Adobe program. Granted, it lacks some photo-specific options, like red-eye reduction and other assorted filters. The layer system is also a bit more primitive. But it can do everything else and then some. PE4 is more stable and intuitive than PS 5.0 LE, with big friendly icons and tool tips.

PE4 is chiefly an editor. For example, graphic novelists or cartoonists can use it to digitally fill color. However, the toolset supports scratch artwork. To that end, it alternates between two tabulated interfaces: "Photo Painting" and "Drawing & Painting", which can be selected at will from the canvas. All tools are available for either mode.

These include a text box for labeling pics, and a number of shader wizards and style presets to transform photos into paintings or line drawings. Of note is the auto-painter, which accepts a number of presets for Edge, Color, Paper, and Brush types. It does require practice and discretion to make anything look good, as it is easy to overwhelm a picture with garbage. And yes, artists can manually touch-up or alter images without any reliance on auto-painting. Finally, the user can load and save a variety of file formats beyond the default Resource Interchange File Format (RIFF), including TIFF, JPEG, bitmaps, Macintosh PICT, and Photoshop PSD. The program also seems to automatically generate backup files in RIFF.

The biggest leg over my old Photoshop, however, are the brushes. PE4 includes 95 different brushes, tips, and blenders called Art Tips, loaded into a tab labeled the Brush Box. Art Tips divide into eight catagories:

Thick Paint
Thin paint
Watercolor
Pencils & Pens
Dry Media
Blenders
Effects
Photo

These implements are all presets; users cannot customize their own brush shape or paint consistency. However, they may vary the brush-size from a pin-point to a dinner plate, adjust the opacity, and alternate between free-hand and straight line strokes.

I don't own a stylus and pad, so I can't review that section, but I can testify to mouse-based art. Right-clicking the cursor brings up a context-sensitive menu, though the options are limited to different brush types within the category, plus incremental size changing. The brushes are self-explanatory and they work the canvas as I expect. Strokes have built-in anti-aliasing and a decent resolution; they still look ragged and a touch pixilated on my high-def LCD monitor, but better than my old programs. Out of the box, the cursor doesn't draw as smoothly as I would like, so users will need to make some adjustments. Images print with soft edges and clear resolution.

The big downside for me has been memory leaks and CPU hogging. Particularly when trying to paste material from another program, PE4 is as slow as a dial-up connection. It shouldn't take five minutes to import a track list or Christmas message from my Word program. And I should not see my CPU running up to 80 or 90%. Simply booting the program is slow compared to my other applications, and I can't see the justification for this.

Also, PE4 should not be seen as a substitute for a document design program. There are no geometry shapes or tables or chart wizards. Just strokes, lines, and your imported images.

On the whole, the program is pretty-looking and diverse enough for my bohemian tasks. It ought to serve any low-budget artist, especially students and hobbyists. However, Painter Essentials 4 does require a patch to deal with these slowdowns and memory leaks, which can drag out the simplest project. Also, the list price of $99 is too high--the Amazon.com figure of 45-55 bones is acceptable.



2 out of 5 stars It does the job, but not a replacement for Photoshop Elements 2.0   December 6, 2008
hendrr
I was looking for a cheap replacement for Adobe Photoshop Elements 2.0 [OLD VERSION] and I thought Corel Painter 4 would do it based upon the reviews.

Corel Painter does not handle layers nearly as neatly as Photoshop Elements. It doesn't handle arcs either (hence the 2 stars). It's only saving grace is the fact that it does photo manipulation better. It is a cheap image editor and it is overpriced. I recommend Adobe Photoshop Elements 2.0 [OLD VERSION] for half the price and the same functionality.



4 out of 5 stars It's no Photoshop - but does the job   September 20, 2008
Boomzilla (Seattle, WA USA)
As a long time Photoshop user I was, admittedly, skeptical about the capabilities of Painter4. I was pleasantly surprised. It certainly is a mid-end product, but has all of the basics you world expect. For the price it really does the job. My kids (13, 15) took to it very well enjoying a very (matter our hours) swift learning curve. For quick picture touch-up's I actually now prefer this over Photoshop (I never thought I'd every say that about another product!).


5 out of 5 stars Great Intro to Photo painting   September 7, 2008
William Tweedy (West Yarmouth, MA United States)
I found this Painter Essentials to be a great introduction to painting. A must for those interested in learning the basics of painting using the computer.


3 out of 5 stars Corel Painter Essentials 4   August 17, 2008
Fotoldy (California United States)
I haven't had much luck using this. Nothing comes out the way I want it to. I'm not crazy about it and you don't have a lot of personal control with it.

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