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QuarkXPress How-To: Who Needs Photoshop?
OK, so QuarkVista, a feature new to XPress 6.5, doesn't completely replace Photoshop. But it does add many image-editing functions to the page-layout app, and it's easy to use.
Written by Erika Kendra on October 14, 2005
Categories: Graphics, Graphics Image Editing, Photo Image Editing, Print, Print Design & Layout, How-Tos
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This tutorial is provided by Against the Clock.
QuarkVista is a powerful tool that brings image editing and enhancement effects to the QuarkXPress party. Before, you had to go to Photoshop for tasks like Find Edges, Unsharp Masking, Gaussian Blur, Posterize, and others. Now, you can work in XPress -- and easily change your mind in XPress, should you want to undo any of the edits and effects. Even Photoshop can't reverse all of its effects.

In this tutorial, you'll complete a partially developed display ad for a St. Petersburg, Florida, historical hotel named The Vinoy. It's a beautiful old building with a colorful and somewhat checkered past. (It was a favorite haunt and love-nest of notorious gangster Al Capone.) You'll import a few pictures onto different QuarkXPress layers, then use QuarkVista's Masks and Picture Effects to create an on-the-fly composite image for the ad.
So you can follow every step, we've provided the fonts and files referred to in the tutorial, as well as the tutorial itself. We've posted them all as a compressed folder. Just click the link "QuarkVista.zip" to download the folder to your machine, and then double-click it to uncompress all the items within the folder.
To open the PDF, you'll need a full version of Adobe Acrobat (6 or higher) or the Adobe Reader, which you can download here:
To learn how to configure your browser for viewing PDF files, see the Adobe Reader tech support page.
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why bother?
It is certainly nice to hear that Quark is making some kind of effort. However, the exchange between InDesign and Photoshop works so well that I am not tempted to revert back to QXP's clunky interface to face its equally clunky image editing tool. So sorry, but after teaching Quark for over 10 years, I have embraced InDesign with great pleasure and cannot even be bothered to open up Quark again. It has remained idle on my computer since last March.