Mike Chaney's Tech Corner
December 23, 2024, 04:19:43 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.
Did you miss your activation email?

Login with username, password and session length
News: Qimage registration expired? New lifetime licenses are only $59.99!
 
   Home   Help Login Register  
Pages: [1]
  Print  
Author Topic: Challenge 25 Qimage makes DVD CD Labels.  (Read 14445 times)
Fred A
Forum Superhero
*****
Posts: 5644



WWW Email
« on: February 02, 2014, 11:08:15 AM »

This challenge is for you to print your own DVD labels using Qimage Ultimate exclusively!
You will need a package of round CD/DVD label paper to print your actual labels.
Handy to make your own template, this is also handy for your measurements of the diameter of the circles as well as the location on the page.
 You can use any piece of paper for a test until you get the label paper!

Otherwise, you can use the one provided in Qimage. It is designed for an 8.5 x 11 sheet called Full Coverage, 2 UP. (This is the small hole label.)

In making your own DVD labels, you will be able to make them for your music CDs, home movies, archived images, even scanning original cds or DVDs and printing the scans onto the labels.
1) You will be able to make any color background for your label
2) Any color text; any size text
3) use any image

My Steps!

1) (Do this first!)
Sort of like when you buy one of those office chairs that you have to put together, and the instructions say, "insert bolt 'G" into hole 'C', screw on matching nut 'H', BUT DO NOT TIGHTEN at this time!

1a) Open Print properties, and click CUSTOM.  
At this time put a dot in Specific Size, and set that to 4.75 x 4.75 inches.
OK out and you will see 4.75 x 4.75 squares on your preview panel.

1b) I set up my driver for a good matte paper selection, Quality = Speed, and Color = Vivid.

1c) (Then I save it as a printer setup for printing DVDs)
*(Now whenever you want to make a DVD label, open RECALL, recall the Print setup for it. Not only will you have the correct print size set, but the printer will be set too.)

2) In Qimage: Go to Custom in print properties, a dot in Layout, click OK and select the template for the DVDs. (Now included with the Standard premade Layouts). DVD2on1.tpl

This will place the labels on the sheet correctly to match the Neato- Fellowes DVD labels.
(2 UP Full Coverage) (Most popular)

** See footnote

3) Now it's time to drag an image to use for printing the label.

3a) If you are making a custom label with a list of songs, or a list of Archived image folders, you might want a plain white or a colored background.
You can download a white background from the internet, or just shoot a picture of something white.
 
Then, in the editor, go to SEL COLOR, and make a small adjustment to the bottom row; NEUTRAL.
Customize by changing the 1.0 to a 0.7 or similar!
Do a File SAVE AS...  and you have a custom colored backgound.
Made a gold one.   See image 1 with red arrows.

4) If you want an image on your label, simply drag it onto the reddish template.
See snaps  2,5,and 6.
4a) See red template snap. This is what you should see just before you drag your image on to it.

5) Here's the fun part!  
Open the Image editor
There's your image. Looks wrong for a round label.
Select a cutout called OVAL.TIF (or if you want to see a guide where the punch hole is for the label) use CDDVD FULL.TIF for the cutout.

6) Tick the little Crop box with an x, and there you are.
Click DONE.
Turn on your printer and print your own labels.

7) If you wish to add text, go into the Page Editor and add your Floating text (avoiding the center where the hole in the paper will be.)  See snaps 3 & 4.

You Can, if you wish;
Cool Save the whole thing as a JOB, and you can recall the JOB and it will have opened the correct template, the print size, the printer setup.. et al.


** Some printers may handle the paper slightly different so the printing may not fall exactly centered on the label paper.

To Correct this,
Recall L   Layouts, and choose your DVD2 on 1 Tpl.
'Recall' is used on Layouts only for adjusting.

The layout will open in Qimage and by using the Page Editor, you can tweak the positions by using the arrow keys. Then from the main screen, SAVE as a renamed TPL.

Have fun..
Fred
« Last Edit: February 02, 2014, 11:50:44 AM by Fred A » Logged
Terry-M
Moderator
Forum Superhero
*****
Posts: 3251



WWW
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2014, 12:47:44 PM »

I don't usually bother with DVD labels any more because I don't collect films etc.
I'll have ago for some of my photo archive DVD's - I need to re-create some CD's that will not now read - fortunately \i do  still have the files an a hard drive.
I pick up the challenge with those.
Terry
Logged
PaulTopol
Newbie
*
Posts: 38


Email
« Reply #2 on: February 09, 2014, 06:36:48 AM »

Hi Fred,
Thanks for all the guidance.

I have a problem...don't be rude.javascript:void(0)

Cannot find the dvd template. Using version 2014.135.

Any suggestions?

The challenge is a really good idea. Gets us to use more skills.

have agreat day

Paul
Logged
Fred A
Forum Superhero
*****
Posts: 5644



WWW Email
« Reply #3 on: February 09, 2014, 10:17:07 AM »

Quote
Cannot find the dvd template. Using version 2014.135.

Any suggestions?

The challenge is a really good idea. Gets us to use more skills.

have agreat day

Paul

Hi Paul,

The template plus other goodies were released in version 2014.137.
I also see that Mike has renamed it using a clearly descriptive name: CD-DVD-Full Coverage.tpl

I believe he renamed it with the foresight that other types of label paper could be used, and would require a different template, aptly named.

So, Suggestion, simply download your latest version.
You will also get the great new ON DECK feature...

PS PS pps.......

Just a comment! Thanks for the compliment on the challenge idea.
It started in my mind like this:

We have a Thursday lunch with a  group of guys who take pictures. During lunch we randomly bring in prints to show and tell.
All I hear is Light Room! Light Room Light Room! Light Room!.... and I look at their prints and see all sorts of HDR, Topaz, and Watercolor filters.
They have one thing in common though.
None of them looked any more like a photograph than a Salvatore Dali painting of a woman with one eye in the middle of her forehead looked like a real person.

So I went about showing them what an under 70.00 program can do against their Photoshops and Lightroom.
.. and that's the rest of the story...
One fellow claimed he loved Lightroom because of the data base.
I challenged him on that, and his scars still haven't healed.
Hence the challenge #24.
You have a great day too, and thanks again.

Fred

Logged
Pages: [1]
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.21 | SMF © 2015, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!
Security updates 2022 by ddisoftware, Inc.