Artioscad Tutorial ~upd~
Click your base line, move your cursor up, and type your desired dimension (e.g., 150mm ) in the distance box at the bottom. Press Enter.
A. Creating a 2D structural layout
By default, your lines are "Cut" (solid line). The bottom of a tray is a crease (dashed line for folding).
For custom designs:
For a structured learning path, Esko provides specialized : Corrugated Design : Learning Module 835 Folding Carton : Learning Module 834
Extend a narrow flap (usually 0.5 inches or 15mm) off the far-left panel. Angled cuts on the top and bottom of this flap ensure it hides neatly inside the box when glued. Step 3: Design Top and Bottom Tuck Flaps
tool to rotate panels along crease lines. ArtiosCAD remembers fold angles for future reference. Add Graphics : Import native files from Adobe Illustrator to see how the artwork aligns with the structural folds. Product Interaction artioscad tutorial
: Access hundreds of international standard designs for folding cartons and corrugated boxes.
: These are non-printing guides used to map out the geometry of a blank.
: Use these as non-printing guides for precise alignment. Click your base line, move your cursor up,
The software will prompt you to select the . This is the panel that stays flat on the table while all other panels fold upward around it (usually the bottom panel or the back panel). Click it. Step 2: Set Fold Angles
: Always keep cut and crease on separate design layers (Layer menu). This prevents confusion during die-making.
Rotate the 3D preview window to check for overlapping flaps or clearance gaps. 7. Advanced ArtiosCAD Workflows Creating a 2D structural layout By default, your