Very well explained. The way you explain the brush tools is so simple that I just feel like start editing right now, literally. Please keep the good work and please make more videos. If you would have a Paterson or make a course I would sign up! I hope you can make a video about the blur brushes and the blur filters that would be something interesting to see.
Thanks for your comment, kind words and encouragement Domingo, you have made my day! :) I will add blur brushes and blur filters to my list of videos to make.
Thank you for a great video I was going to go down the photoshop route till I seen one of your videos doing this on the iPad so I got this instead.. Thank you so much just subscribed looking fowards to learning with you
Nice job on this video Andrew! I hadn’t used the patch tool in the past because I wasn’t sure how it worked. The mountain in the picture is Mt Hood, the highest mountain in Oregon at 11,249 ft.
Thanks for your comment and kind words. Tutorials on Affinity Designer iPad is a possibility but will prob be a good bit down the line. Have lots more videos/ideas planned first :)
Another great and instructive video. One quick question if I may. You went into detail over the various clone tools, with the exception of the healing tool. How does it make it’s selection and how does it differ from the other tools you demonstrated. Thanks once again! 😃
Thanks Michael, that’s a good question! I think I maybe went over that tool in the previous video or maybe the next video after this one as am can’t remember why I didn’t include it this one! :)
Thanks, I needed that😊. When I 1st started trying to learn Affinity Photo, the tutorials for removing objects, people, or whatever used the inpainting brush, so that is my ‘go to’ way. I’ve never really understood how to use the patch tool or used the healing brush, now I’ll give them a go. Perhaps, further along, you would explain brushes? I was watching a video and by chance, I heard the guy say that when you buy & import 3rd party brushes they need to be…not activated, adjust the settings?🤷🏼♂️ or they won’t work. I appreciate you and your willingness to share and teach what you know.
I did have a 4th example photo where I used the inpainting brush, but my camera went out of focus :( It's a good tool too tho. I will add brushes to my list of videos to make as a few people have asked for too. Thanks for your comment and suggestion :)
If you select the 'patch tool' and then draw a shape with it on your artwork, then in the contextual menu (menu at the bottom) you can change the rotation, then when you move the selection, you will see the rotation results... sometimes its easier to move the selection first then rotate it... hope this helps, and lmk if it doesn't :)
I find it incredibly STUPID that the desktop version is a lot more complicated, why can't they simply make it equally intuitive as the iPad version? why they have to be so different? I know there might be more functions to the desktop version, maybe, but still seems to be unnecessarily complicated I can't figure out how to do this and other basic edits in the desktop version. This is a problem not only with Affinity but with most desktop software, it's like desktop software is stuck with 2005 layouts with a modernized appearance while nowadays intuitive apps in mobile devices are becoming the norm
With the release of Affinity Photo 2, they have made the desktop and iPad versions more like each other which is great, as yes in Affinity Photo 1 there were a lot of differences :)
Very well explained. The way you explain the brush tools is so simple that I just feel like start editing right now, literally. Please keep the good work and please make more videos. If you would have a Paterson or make a course I would sign up! I hope you can make a video about the blur brushes and the blur filters that would be something interesting to see.
Thanks for your comment, kind words and encouragement Domingo, you have made my day! :) I will add blur brushes and blur filters to my list of videos to make.
The mountain is Mount Hood, photo probably taken from the Willamette Valley south of Portland, OR
Thank you for a great video I was going to go down the photoshop route till I seen one of your videos doing this on the iPad so I got this instead.. Thank you so much just subscribed looking fowards to learning with you
Nice job on this video Andrew! I hadn’t used the patch tool in the past because I wasn’t sure how it worked. The mountain in the picture is Mt Hood, the highest mountain in Oregon at 11,249 ft.
Thanks Larry and thanks so much for sharing your brilliant photo with us :) I really appreciate it. Just Google photos of Mt Hood, amazing!!!
Hello. Very well explained. Merci beaucoup
Salut :) Thanks for your comment & kind words
First of all thank you for all these super useful tutorials, and second it would be nice to have some tutorials on affinity designer for the iPad.
Thanks for your comment and kind words. Tutorials on Affinity Designer iPad is a possibility but will prob be a good bit down the line. Have lots more videos/ideas planned first :)
Nice sir may you live long.
Thank you Crezlip! :)
Another great and instructive video. One quick question if I may. You went into detail over the various clone tools, with the exception of the healing tool. How does it make it’s selection and how does it differ from the other tools you demonstrated. Thanks once again! 😃
Thanks Michael, that’s a good question! I think I maybe went over that tool in the previous video or maybe the next video after this one as am can’t remember why I didn’t include it this one! :)
Excellent! So useful. Thank you.
Thank you Christine, glad it was helpful :)
Your videos are very helpful! You’re doing great.
Thanks Renata! I really appreciate your kind words :)
Thanks, I needed that😊. When I 1st started trying to learn Affinity Photo, the tutorials for removing objects, people, or whatever used the inpainting brush, so that is my ‘go to’ way. I’ve never really understood how to use the patch tool or used the healing brush, now I’ll give them a go. Perhaps, further along, you would explain brushes? I was watching a video and by chance, I heard the guy say that when you buy & import 3rd party brushes they need to be…not activated, adjust the settings?🤷🏼♂️ or they won’t work. I appreciate you and your willingness to share and teach what you know.
I did have a 4th example photo where I used the inpainting brush, but my camera went out of focus :( It's a good tool too tho. I will add brushes to my list of videos to make as a few people have asked for too. Thanks for your comment and suggestion :)
Where can I get the image you are working on, it looks great!
I will try and add them somewhere online in the next few days and will put a link in the description :)
Thank you for the Tutorial
You're welcome Columbus :)
No content aware tool ? In ps that would have solved 99% of actions with much less duplicate patterns
You're 100% right Pieter in regards to PS content aware tool, its awesome... hopefully AP is working on their own version of content aware :)
Do you know of a way to rotate the clone patch tool in the iPad version? I've been trying to figure it out.
If you select the 'patch tool' and then draw a shape with it on your artwork, then in the contextual menu (menu at the bottom) you can change the rotation, then when you move the selection, you will see the rotation results... sometimes its easier to move the selection first then rotate it... hope this helps, and lmk if it doesn't :)
@@CreativeGoodmanHad to reboot my iPad but the rotation button started working properly. Thank you!
Can the background be removed?
What do you mean sorry Pranabendu? Background as in the sky?
Hi, Andrew. Is there a Content-Aware fill on Affinity for the iPad?
The AP version of ‘content-aware fill’ is ‘inpainting’. There’s an Inpainting Brush Tool in AP iPad. There will be a tutorial coming soon on it :)
Thank you.
You're welcome Maverick! :)
Bravissimo, grazie ;)
grazie Filippo! :)
nice job
Danke schön
Bitte Schön Basil :)
I find it incredibly STUPID that the desktop version is a lot more complicated, why can't they simply make it equally intuitive as the iPad version? why they have to be so different? I know there might be more functions to the desktop version, maybe, but still seems to be unnecessarily complicated
I can't figure out how to do this and other basic edits in the desktop version. This is a problem not only with Affinity but with most desktop software, it's like desktop software is stuck with 2005 layouts with a modernized appearance while nowadays intuitive apps in mobile devices are becoming the norm
With the release of Affinity Photo 2, they have made the desktop and iPad versions more like each other which is great, as yes in Affinity Photo 1 there were a lot of differences :)