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Design Your Next Label
In Five Minutes!
This portion takes you
through a sample design session, covering some of the key design
features along the way. In the end, you will see how easy it is to
design a sophisticated label in just five minutes.
Introduction
Unless you are modifying an existing
label design, you will start with a blank screen, as shown below.
Since we won't typically see the whole screen at once during this
tutorial, let's review its main components now.
(1) The
top-most area is the "Title Bar," which identifies the name of
the label design being worked on (currently "Format1," because
this is the first label we are working with and we haven't saved
anything yet).
(2) Next
is the "Main Menu Bar," containing "pull-down" menus
for accessing commands and options that control the software.
(3) Next
are the "Tool Bars," with short-cut buttons to the most
commonly used functions and commands. Up to three tool bars can be
displayed, and they can be moved away from the screen edge and resized.
(4) Below
that is the horizontal "ruler" (a vertical ruler also runs
down the left-hand side) that makes it easy to see just exactly where
your cursor and label components are.
(5) To
the left of the vertical ruler on the left hand edge of the label design
area is the positioning "tool bar".
(6) In
the middle is the label design area (which will start out blank for this
design session).
(7) Just
below the bottom of the label design area is the horizontal scroll bar,
used to "pan" left and right when you are zoomed in to perform
fine work on just a portion of the label. (Near the bottom right side of
this next image is the bottom part of the vertical scroll bar, similarly
used to control panning in the vertical direction.)
(8) Finally, at the very bottom, is the "help line,"
which offers quick one-line hints to guide you through your work.
Getting Started
Each section below begins by displaying
the time at the completion of that section's procedure(s).
Finish creating your first text object by
Start by clicking on the "T"
(short for "text") on the tool bar. (Because of the slowish
speed of graphics transmission by modem, we show only portions of the
screen.) The animation below shows the steps for creating the text
object. (See the step numbers listed below the animation for an
explanation.)
Step 1: Move your cursor to the desired
position. (Notice the cursor changes from the arrow shape to the same
"T" image from the tool-bar, indicating "text creation
mode." The cursor "cross-hairs" indicate where the center
of your new text will be.)
Step 2: Click mouse button number 1 to
create the new text. (The cursor changes back into select mode.)
You can keep the default "Sample Text,"
or easily edit it as follows.
Step 3: Single click on the text with the
text-edit cursor (or simply double-click on the text with the regular
arrow cursor).
Step 4: Type in the desired data.
Step 5: Press Enter to complete your text
edit.
This entire process, four mouse clicks and the
typing of the text, required 17 seconds.
Flowing or "merging" data into your
label design from other software is easy, but beyond the scope of this
tutorial.
Move and resize your text by
Step 1: Place mouse cursor over text and
click and hold the mouse button. (Black "handles"
appear, indicating that the object is "selected." The
cursor shape also changes to indicate "move mode.")
Step 2: Simply move your mouse to the
desired new position for the text.
Step 3: To resize the text, select a corner
handle and "drag" it as desired.
(Moving the text took us 2 seconds; resizing it
took 4.)
Use your mouse to place and size bar
codes, boxes, and more text by
Our tests showed 2 minutes and 20 seconds to make the
following additions and changes to our label design:
(1) Add two bar codes.
(2) Change the language of one of the bar
codes.
(3) Add two more text fields.
(4) Draw a rectangle around some of the
items.
To create our bar codes, we simply click on the
bar code tool. As with the creation of text, the mouse cursor changes
shape when you move it back into the label design area, reminding you
which object type you are about to create.
The animation below will show you how to create
and size a bar code. (See the step numbers below the animation for an
explanation.)
Step 1: Click and release the mouse cursor
to create a new bar code.
Step 2: Now, let's arbitrarily change the
bar code data to "754." (As when we changed the text before,
you can either double-click on the bar code with the regular mouse
pointer, or single click on it with the text edit cursor (which requires
first clicking on the bar code button in the tool bar.)
Step 3: Drag a side handle to change the
height or width, or a corner handle to change both at the same time.
Newly created bar codes default to the Code 3-of-9
language. To select a different language, simply double-click on the bar
code you wish to change to display the bar code "property
page." Next, click on the down-arrow to the right of the Symbology
option and select a different symbology from the drop-down list. (See
the step numbers below for more details.)
To change the selected bar code from Code 3-of-9
to Interleaved 2-of-5,
Step 1: Click on the down arrow of the
Symbology option to display the list of the available bar codes.
Step 2: Next, click on the desired
symbology in the list, in this case Interleaved 2-of-5.
We are now going to draw a rectangle around a few
of the items we've added to our label. Click on the rectangle tool in
the tool bar to enter "rectangle drawing mode." (See the
animation below, and the subsequent step numbers for more details. Note
that the one text and one bar code object we are enclosing are in fact
part of our evolving label design, although their creation was not shown
above.)
Step 1: Place the "cross-hairs"
of your cursor where you want to start the first corner of your
rectangle and click and hold your mouse button.
Step 2: Drag your mouse cursor diagonally
to the desired position for the opposite corner of your rectangle and
release your mouse button to complete your rectangle.
Import almost any picture format by
Select the Create Picture button from the tool bar (or from the
"Create" pull-down menu).
Select whichever one of your available picture
images you wish to import. (The ones displayed here are just a few we
had in house.)
It took us 20 seconds to find, select, import and
place this black-and-white image from a graphics file called
DISKETTE.PCX.
Add more text, customize as desired, and you're ready
to print by
To complete our design, we performed the following procedures (in
another 2 minutes and 10 seconds).
(1) Imported a second graphic as the
company logo.
(2) Changed the type size and style of the
"Specialty Magnetics, Inc." text.
(3) Changed the color of this text and
placed a black rectangle behind it and the logo in order to
"reverse out" this portion of the label.
(4) Added the 3-line paragraph below the
diskette image.
(5) Separated the text "754" from
the bar code, moved it and attached the text sub-string
"Item:" in front of it.
(6) Resized the "754" bar code
and the rectangle around the Assembly Lot Number to include both bar
codes. (Rectangles are easily resized using the mouse, just as we did
with bar codes and text.)
And we're done! All we have to do now is print
(see below).
And here we go!
Click on the "Print" tool-bar
button, or execute the File, Print command to start printing.
The length of time it takes to print will depend
on the type of printer, the complexity and size of your label and the
type of communication connection between your PC and printer.
(We recommend parallel port connections for users
printing large amounts of graphics or TrueType fonts that change from
label to label. Multiple identical labels and labels where the changing
portions are based on bar codes and text built-into the printer
will almost always print out at the full-rated speed of the printer,
even over a serial port.)
Back
** the above tutorial is an excerpt from Seagull
Scientific.
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