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How to Design a Car Wrap in CorelDRAW

How to Design a Car Wrap in CorelDRAW
How to Design a Car Wrap in CorelDRAW

How to Design a Car Wrap in CorelDRAW

Vehicle or truck wraps are an eye-catching approach to gather consideration for your business while you’re making the rounds. What’s more, with Corel’s library of vehicle templates, it’s easy to put exactly what you need where you need it.

In this how-to, we’ll make a wrap for one side of a Toyota Sienna minivan.

1. Get the Template

As per vehicle specs, this minivan is around 200″ long and around 70″ high. So we’ll have to use a paper size enormous enough to accommodate. From (File > New) under Name: type Sienna. Set the width to 210″ and tallness to 80″, and pick RGB for the color mode.

To locate the right format, open Window > Dockers > CONNECT. Search for “Sienna,” and you’ll discover a template with four perspectives: front, back, left, and right. Drag this clasp workmanship onto your page. Since just one perspective on the four is required, ungroup the layout by right-tapping on it and choosing Ungroup Objects. At that point you can delete everything except the perspective on the side we’ll be wrapping. For this template, set its width to 200″ in the Interactive Property Bar, ensuring the perspective proportion is kept up, and place it inside the paper borders.

Tip: When providing artwork for a vehicle wrap to a print shop, be certain that the level separation between the wheels coordinates that estimation on the real vehicle. This is the simplest separation to quantify on a vehicle.

2. Create the Power Clip

Presently we need to use the vehicle diagram to characterize the limit for the content we’ll add to the wrap. With the Pick tool, right-click on the outermost curve of the template and pick Frame Type > Create Empty PowerClip Frame. (You can likewise discover this bend toward the finish of the item list in the Object Manager.) The PowerClip outline is shown by the huge X.

3. Include the Content

Presently we can make or acquire the elements we need to show up on the vehicle: logo, phone number, expression, cut workmanship – and so on. It’s useful to spread out all objects in void space first, roughly coordinating where they will go on the vehicle itself.

4. Move the Content into the Frame

Select the first element to move – for this situation the adapted houses along the base. When moving items inside a PowerClip, you’ll notice the casing turns grayish-blue. At the point when you complete the move, the objects are managed along the edges of the PowerClip.

Moving ensuing items into the edge work a similar way – simply make certain to press the W key while moving objects, to put them inside the PowerClip

5. Isolate the Frame

The PowerClip and its substance are what will be sent to the print shop. You can undoubtedly discover these objects in the Object Manager.

From here, you can duplicate these objects into another file, or spot them on their own layer. Presently you can spare the document as an EPS, or distribute to PDF, and send it to your print shop.


Thanks for reading! We hope you found this tutorial helpful and we would love to hear your feedback in the Comments section below. And show us what you’ve learned by sharing your photos and creative projects with us.

salman khan

Written by worldofitech

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