Two years later and I'm only just realising my octopus artwork was showcased in this video! Thanks for sharing it! I still love Affinity so much and use it almost every day! :)
I use Affinity Designer (and Inkscape) for all my media needs (including professional client work). I don't miss Illustrator at all, at least, not for my specific workflow and needs. I guess it's a matter of personal tastes and needs. Budget is also a huge thing for freelancers who don't have client work on a regular basis. In that case, Affinity is the better choice since the expenditure on a cloud-based subscription would not be justified.
@@rgl8109 Nope. The first version of AI came out in 1988. S'why it was originally called (shock) "Illustrator 88". Time for me to go yell at the neighbor's kids.
I found illustrator a much steeper learning curve and over complicated, slow, bloated prone to crashes but very powerful. I bought affinty d and p and designer is a joy. So quick to learn way more intuative power on the important bit. Fast workflow. Love it.
Thanks for the feedback! We totally agree on this, although the power of Illustrator is undeniable. The price point is one of the greatest advantages of Affinity too (both Designer and Photo).
Of course Illustrator has a steeper learning curve. It has more features and functions. But there are some things that Serif just does in a smart way which Adobe doesn't. That much is true. But if you need all the stuff that Illustrator does then you still need Illustrator. If you don't, then you're winning and saving money. Curiously, a new feature in Illustrator is the slider that adjusts the points on a line making it smoother or not. Way back, long before Affinity came along, Serif had that same feature in their product called DrawPlus. I thought it was awesome. But it didn't make it into Affinity Designer, and now Adobe has done the same feature decades later.
Affinity Designer 2 has everything I want and everything I may ever need, except the animation feature as in Krita or Clip Studio. But I can easily export vector layers to Moho Studio, which I'm learning right now.
Been using Affinity after I graduated from Community college. Haven't really been touching it as of late, but Affinity with the one payment to use their programs vs Adobe's Cloud subscription plan was the biggest hit against the Adobe products. Despite them being the ones I used 100% of the time I was there. Plus, Affinity's stuff has workbooks as well
Got to say everybody loves the Adobe programs, I do as well. But most people couldn't care less about the cloud or subscription, its too much of a hole in the pocket. That's why everybody gets a cracked version.
Yup that’s what I did… BUT you can’t download any Adobe stuff unless deleting the program that searches for bootleg programs and will make it so you can’t use it then you have to delete the Adobe stuff for it to work again or the specific program attached to it. But hey it’s whatever …. People get free music and games… why not other stuff. They make more than enough $$ and I’ve never heard of anyone getting sued or anything so it’s whatever.
I loooove affinity photo/designer/publisher and personally i find it wayyyyyyy better than photoshop i will say photo shop has a better brush selection with special effects but theirs work arounds with affinity
Great video. I personally use Affinity Designer (ipad version) for professional client work all of the time. It's not a matter of cost. I have the full Adobe CC suite as well. The real reason is that Affinity offered a full-featured ipad app way before Adobe. My guess is that Adobe still hasn't caught up with their Illustrator app, though I do use Adobe Lightroom (ipad) in my workflow and love it too.
Illustrator is a pain in the ass for a beginner. I did more in Affinity in one hour than I could in Illustrator in three days. In Illustrator something, that should be a simple task, like erasing an unwanted line segment becomes a job in itself. Illustrator may be something I come back to every once in a while but for now I'll stick with Affinity as my go to choice.
I’ll give an unpopular opinion… I’ve used Affinity Des. And Photo for a while. I’d consider myself a semi pro. I’ve learned photoshop really good. I’ve basically learned to do all the stuff I need to do for my “specific” needs. But there’s always more to learn. I just got illustrator the other day. Never touched it before. Of course the UI and other means to do stuff is different but in honesty I’m not intimidated because at the end of the day I know what I’m doing I just need to learn how to do it in Illustrator. But knowing that Illustrator and photoshop have better and more features/tools is incentive enough to use them. Yeah nobody wants to pay $35 extra dollars a month but most of us spend that every week on fast food, clothes, video games,etc . At the end of the day, you want a software that will give you the best chance at achieving your best work. So chances are my work will get better because I’m going to make sure that I use something I pay for more than something I paid for once, and never have to pay again. The point is, you can never truly know which is better if you don’t master them both. Only then can you compare the two.
Very, very good points! I am on the same track as you! I have the entire Creative Cloud software package. I like Affinity as well, but not Affinity Photo.
@@peterwilson9699 Update: That’s awesome. I’ve learned Some things can be done quicker in illustrator but nothing that would absolutely change your life. But my opinion is based of only having to create Simple to semi complex designs. I love AF Designer for being a great stepping stone for anyone who wants to get into graphic design. At the end of the day, they made a product, I bought their product,I enjoyed it, and they got paid. So all parties win, plus I will always own it. There both the same but illustrator has a few more handy features. So now a days i fully use illustrator because it’s just a force of habit and I pay for it every month 😅 Ohhh and Using those “Handy” extra features reallyyyy makes me feel like I got my bang for my Buck
Very good! I love both Illustrator and Designer and own them both. I have also Affinity Publisher and Photo. When it comes down to Adobe, I have the entire Creative Cloud.
If I had the money for yet another subscription I would give the Adobe CC line-up of tools a try. But I really really dislike the subscription model. I have been using Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher for all my needs and have no problem in double-dipping for what I get (bought all tools on mac, pc and Ipad since I have one of each machines).
I prefer Affinity Designer over Illustrator. Because one, I don’t have to paid each month just to use the software because it doesn’t make any sense, and two, it includes the pixels features which the concept can be done in just one software instead of me having to switching between Photoshop and Illustrator just to get the results that I want. If Adobe want everyone to rely on their software, they should bring back the perpetual license.
I think the pixel features, brush tools, etc are the main attraction for Affinity Designer. The cost is not really comparable since these there's a very big difference in the capabilities of these tools. Its really like comparing the price of a car to the price of a truck then having a "preference" the cheaper one, because its cheaper. But if you need the truck, you need the truck regardless of the price. It talk about cost, you have to compare two trucks, one Chevy and one Ford. Then you can say, I'm saving money with one over the other. That's not the case with these programs.
Do you know what is the best file format to use when you export an design that you want people to be able to customize them self with their own software; like changing the colors of individual items, for example the hair color of an avatar? Thank you.
STOP 0:25 "1897" ??? Do you mean 1997 When illustrator was launched is that what you mean because it's not 1897 hell we did not have computers @ that time.
I was a long time Illustrator user (since Illustrator 88) who dumped it due to disgust with the subscription scheme and moved to Affinity. In general, I like Affinity but there are many upgrades Designer needs before it's a true professional level program. It's the weakest link in the Affinity suite.
Thanks a lot for the feedback! It's true that the pricing plans do set them apart in a way.. We're planning to explore the rest of the Affinity Suite in upcoming videos too
I believe they are all equally weak if you're comparing them to expensive software like Adobe, Corel, or Quark. I was also disappointed by the subscription pricing, but that didn't change the fact that I still needed Adobe software for my work.
hello, i'm considering buying the Afinitty Photo for my work. But considering it costs over 300 brazilian reals, i am in doubt. What are these upgrades you mentioned? Do you think it affects the usage of Afinnity Photo as a proffesional software? Thanks in advance.
New Affinity Designer 2.0 has filled most missing features except image tracing. But, for this you find freeware on the net. AF is now def the better choice, especially as it costs nothing compared to Adobe Illustrator
I have been using Illustrator and Photoshop since that's what I've been using since college and up to my graphic design career, but seeing how Adobe's ridiculous subscription price and it's hidden and questionable charges, I decided to opt in with Affinity since it's perpetual licensing and I get to own the software forever, However, Affinity still lacks all the essentials I need in designing, since I am looking for the same tools I am using in Illustrator. Hopefully, Serif step up their game and improve their software to better.
Am a graphic designer, projects are hard to come and if one choose to subscribe monthly for graphic tools how would I pay next month subscription payment if there are no job coming in? Subscription eat the artist profits.
Wait! 1897?!? you mean Adobe Illustrator was already 92 years old when I started using it?! DANG!!! must of had some super steampunk computers back in 1897!!
There's just so much missing from Affinity to really consider it. No shape builder and recolor artwork is a deal breaker. And there being a complete lack of simple things like a diffuse blending mode is just crazy, because people have been asking for it since 2017. There's a whole bunch of stuff from Photo that should be in Designer, but isn't, and it's been so many years since a meaningful update I've lost hope for it. They need to start getting off their ass with it, because it's a huge shame how it's been in limbo as basically a Beta program for so long.
Oh yes, there is a laundry list of features missing and bugs from Affinity. Hoping they adres some of these tomorrow since there is a big announcement. Been using their suite for 3 years now, 8+ hours a day. Still won't switch back to Adobe for now. The meat and potato tools are all fine, some even better than Adobe. For me at least.
Thanks for the video. Affinity designer works for me, as I am a casual non professional user. AI is probably better but i'm not willing to pay 20€ / month for what I need.
Thank you for the feedback! We totally agree. It's true that half of our team relies exclusively on the Adobe Suite almost all the time (for editing, design, motion graphics...etc.), but we still use the Affinity pack for various purposes. The price, intuitiveness and overall great performance are some of its greatest selling points
Thanks for this. I am so new to art and design and looking at all options. I'll have to check and see if you did a comparison with Inkscape as well. Unrelated: at the 8:00 mark I just have to say that I LOVE the style! I keep gravitating towards art done in that style and I don't have a name for it.
I can't and won't get illustrator, but the designer works flawless with no problems. I won't design anything besides small adds.Right now, it is just 40.00. You can't beat that.
i love working in photoshop as a designer, but everytime i need to do something in illustrator... this program sucks the joy out of my soul, words can't describe how bad the workflow in illustrator is compared to photoshop, i know they work with two different standards but oh my god, simple tools that exist in both programs are completely different, hidden behind somehwere in illustrator or needing a 20 clicks process to be done instead of one click like in photoshop, i'm considering affinity designer to escape this hell.
I think the majority of people saying Adobe is expensive is because they aren't using the programs to the full extent they are capable of. Just mention Adobe fonts/Typekit. Need a font and it's in Typekit? You just saved hundreds of dollars and then your subscription has paid for itself. It has definitely saved me many times at my job! They now also have some variable fonts where you can get exactly the weight, style etc for your font. Not to mention if you have a full CC subscription, you instantly have access to TONS of Adobe programs beyond the big 3. AND there are constantly updates coming out for CC. I would still say it IS a BIT expensive, but not nearly as people make it out to be. Also considering that it is a way better deal than the CS packages used to be where you would drop, what was it like $600 per program every year or two? What I do wish though is that there were much cheaper, stripped down versions available for people. The problem is catering to the high end designers who will benefit greatly off of all its tools while leaving behind the casual designers who want a few tools and don't need all the bells and whistles. It really seems like a huge missed opportunity with Adobe to not offer a low-cost basic version OR to even offer their now very outdated, though still very usable, CS6 versions at a much lower cost. Also, not sure why the video says Illustrator can only zoom in 900%. It definitely can go more than that. I don't remember exactly how much off the top of my head and it's on my other computer but yeah. Definitely more than 900%. lol
Illustrator is the industry-standard vector tool and comparing it to Affinity Designer when it comes to a professional work situation is just wrong/silly imo. If you are a hobbyist or beginner then Affinity might be for you, depending on what your end goal is. I've worked with illustrator professionally since 2001 and since my clients send me .ai, .eps, and .pdf -files (in that order) and expect those same files back, Affinity is not an option. Also, if an Adobe CC subscription is too expensive for you then you are not a professional by any stretch of the imagination. Sure, I do wish it was cheaper! Comparing these two programs is kinda like comparing FreeCad to Solidworks or Blender to Maya...and I love Blender btw!
What is industry-standard? Do you know how old the PDF format is? Illustrator is basically just a PDF editor (.ai = PDF, just rename the extension, and EPS gets PDF with a double-click on any Mac). So if you can open, edit and save a PDF, you are basically industry standard. That applies to roughly every vector tool from the late 1990's. Even 2001 Freehand 10 can run 100% commercial grade in 2022. So Affinity will be as industry-grade as anything else. With a way more attractive pricing. Like that manual screwdriver that never stops working. What is not so industry-standard, is that Illustrator after nearly 35 years still misses the third connector type: the triangle. How professional is that? You just can pick them out: those logo's with bad straight-to-curve connections. All made in Illustrator by not-so-professional artists.
Eventually, everything will be a subscription. Even automobile features. You want heated seats? Enable it with a subscription, after you've already bought the car. This is the nature of capitalism and the future of the world.
@@InspirationTuts2D True, hopefully the dev team for Affinity Designer will prioritize tools like the Shape Builder and etc ... Then it'll completely over take the Adobe's products.
@@InspirationTuts2D Intuitiveness is a matter of personal preference. I imagine that it has a lot to do with past experiences. I find Illustrator to be more intuitive. I like that I can do far, far more things while holding 1 tool. In AD, I have to make lots of trips back to the toolbox. For example. You select the rectangle tool. You draw a rectangle. Then immediately drag/copy it. Not possible in AD. You have to make a trip to the toolbox to select a different tool to drag/copy it. So, which one is more intuitive? I don't know, but I do know which one will copy the rectangle faster. This is the truth with each and every single tool. If you're holding the eyedropper tool in Illustrator, you can do so many other things that you can almost forget that you're holding the eyedropper tool. I would not call any of that intuitive. If you don't know it, then there's nothing about the tools that are telling you that you can do it. So, maybe this is not intuitive. But, none of that is remotely possible in AD. What we find is that being more "intuitive" is probably less important than being more capable. For sure, the workflow is much faster in Illustrator.
I wouldn’t even use illustrator, if it was better. Adobe pushing their bloody subscription model down everyone’s throat has put them rather high on my “avoid business where possible“ list just below a certain Russian dictator…
Illustrator launched in 1897 eh? Hard to take a video serious when such glaring inaccuracies are published. Imagine publishing a video and saying the Spice Girls or Michael Jackson debuted in 1776, and not catching such an obvious impossibility.
There's only one real option. Coreldraw. This is the same as it's been for decades. Affinity Designer doesn't even begin to change this reality. AD is fine software, but it's not realistic or reasonable to compare it to these giant total solutions such as Illustrator or Coreldraw. But the comparison videos are entertaining and are great for people who love the idea that they can thumb their noses at Adobe and get something for practically nothing. But that's just a fantasy. You get what you pay for.
Whoever made this video is not a graphic designer, also doesn't use Illustrator and Designer. Whoever made this video is clueless about using these programs. You can tell because during the video they showed an iPad and ProCreate.
Two years later and I'm only just realising my octopus artwork was showcased in this video! Thanks for sharing it! I still love Affinity so much and use it almost every day! :)
I use Affinity Designer (and Inkscape) for all my media needs (including professional client work). I don't miss Illustrator at all, at least, not for my specific workflow and needs. I guess it's a matter of personal tastes and needs. Budget is also a huge thing for freelancers who don't have client work on a regular basis. In that case, Affinity is the better choice since the expenditure on a cloud-based subscription would not be justified.
Is the quality just as good as AI for flat artwork? Looking I to AI or Affinity to create flat artwork.
"Ever since it was launched in 1897..." Dang! I wish I had a t-shirt from my freshman year.
I had to play it 5 times to make sure I was hearing correctly 😂
isnt more like 1997????
@@rgl8109 Nope. The first version of AI came out in 1988. S'why it was originally called (shock) "Illustrator 88". Time for me to go yell at the neighbor's kids.
It has existed before the pc
Lol
Ahhh 1897, back before Adobe’s subscription model and airplanes. Good times back then.
Now I know what they used to make these war posters back then.
lmfao fr
"Uncle Sam Wants YOU!!... to subscribe for 1 schilling and 4 ha'pennies per month"
😂😂😂😂 wow
I heard it, rewound to confirm, and had a good laugh. If this is true, I'm REALLY old.
I found illustrator a much steeper learning curve and over complicated, slow, bloated prone to crashes but very powerful. I bought affinty d and p and designer is a joy. So quick to learn way more intuative power on the important bit. Fast workflow. Love it.
Thanks for the feedback! We totally agree on this, although the power of Illustrator is undeniable. The price point is one of the greatest advantages of Affinity too (both Designer and Photo).
👍🏼💯
Of course Illustrator has a steeper learning curve. It has more features and functions. But there are some things that Serif just does in a smart way which Adobe doesn't. That much is true. But if you need all the stuff that Illustrator does then you still need Illustrator. If you don't, then you're winning and saving money. Curiously, a new feature in Illustrator is the slider that adjusts the points on a line making it smoother or not. Way back, long before Affinity came along, Serif had that same feature in their product called DrawPlus. I thought it was awesome. But it didn't make it into Affinity Designer, and now Adobe has done the same feature decades later.
1897, This is amazing! I would never have guessed Illustrator was so old :) . Inkscape is great too, and worth trying.
it was launched in 1987.
Affinity Designer 2 has everything I want and everything I may ever need, except the animation feature as in Krita or Clip Studio. But I can easily export vector layers to Moho Studio, which I'm learning right now.
Affinity of course. Especially if you get it today while 30% off.
Affinity Designer 2.2 now has a shape builder tool & flood fill tool.
I love Affinity !
Been using Affinity after I graduated from Community college. Haven't really been touching it as of late, but Affinity with the one payment to use their programs vs Adobe's Cloud subscription plan was the biggest hit against the Adobe products. Despite them being the ones I used 100% of the time I was there.
Plus, Affinity's stuff has workbooks as well
Fantastic information and really clearly presented with all the styles and examples. Thanks so much. 😊
Glad it was helpful!
Got to say everybody loves the Adobe programs, I do as well. But most people couldn't care less about the cloud or subscription, its too much of a hole in the pocket. That's why everybody gets a cracked version.
Should we tell him? hmm.... no way anymore.... right.
Yup that’s what I did… BUT you can’t download any Adobe stuff unless deleting the program that searches for bootleg programs and will make it so you can’t use it then you have to delete the Adobe stuff for it to work again or the specific program attached to it. But hey it’s whatever …. People get free music and games… why not other stuff. They make more than enough $$ and I’ve never heard of anyone getting sued or anything so it’s whatever.
Great video. This helped me figured out which one to choose.I'm leaning towards AD since it seems less intimidating for a beginner such as myself.
I loooove affinity photo/designer/publisher and personally i find it wayyyyyyy better than photoshop i will say photo shop has a better brush selection with special effects but theirs work arounds with affinity
Great video. I personally use Affinity Designer (ipad version) for professional client work all of the time. It's not a matter of cost. I have the full Adobe CC suite as well. The real reason is that Affinity offered a full-featured ipad app way before Adobe. My guess is that Adobe still hasn't caught up with their Illustrator app, though I do use Adobe Lightroom (ipad) in my workflow and love it too.
Illustrator is a pain in the ass for a beginner. I did more in Affinity in one hour than I could in Illustrator in three days. In Illustrator something, that should be a simple task, like erasing an unwanted line segment becomes a job in itself. Illustrator may be something I come back to every once in a while but for now I'll stick with Affinity as my go to choice.
Vectornator 👌, Good UI , Free for Lifetime
I’ll give an unpopular opinion…
I’ve used Affinity Des. And Photo for a while. I’d consider myself a semi pro. I’ve learned photoshop really good. I’ve basically learned to do all the stuff I need to do for my “specific” needs. But there’s always more to learn. I just got illustrator the other day. Never touched it before. Of course the UI and other means to do stuff is different but in honesty I’m not intimidated because at the end of the day I know what I’m doing I just need to learn how to do it in Illustrator. But knowing that Illustrator and photoshop have better and more features/tools is incentive enough to use them. Yeah nobody wants to pay $35 extra dollars a month but most of us spend that every week on fast food, clothes, video games,etc . At the end of the day, you want a software that will give you the best chance at achieving your best work. So chances are my work will get better because I’m going to make sure that I use something I pay for more than something I paid for once, and never have to pay again.
The point is, you can never truly know which is better if you don’t master them both. Only then can you compare the two.
Very, very good points! I am on the same track as you! I have the entire Creative Cloud software package. I like Affinity as well, but not Affinity Photo.
@@peterwilson9699
Update:
That’s awesome. I’ve learned Some things can be done quicker in illustrator but nothing that would absolutely change your life. But my opinion is based of only having to create Simple to semi complex designs. I love AF Designer for being a great stepping stone for anyone who wants to get into graphic design. At the end of the day, they made a product, I bought their product,I enjoyed it, and they got paid. So all parties win, plus I will always own it. There both the same but illustrator has a few more handy features.
So now a days i fully use illustrator because it’s just a force of habit and I pay for it every month 😅
Ohhh and Using those “Handy” extra features reallyyyy makes me feel like I got my bang for my Buck
Very good! I love both Illustrator and Designer and own them both. I have also Affinity Publisher and Photo. When it comes down to Adobe, I have the entire Creative Cloud.
If I had the money for yet another subscription I would give the Adobe CC line-up of tools a try. But I really really dislike the subscription model. I have been using Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher for all my needs and have no problem in double-dipping for what I get (bought all tools on mac, pc and Ipad since I have one of each machines).
Can you please do an update video with affinity designer v2
"Ever since it was launched in 1897! LOL!"
I just downloaded affinity designer and photo for a discounted price. I can’t wait to start learning.
I prefer Affinity Designer over Illustrator. Because one, I don’t have to paid each month just to use the software because it doesn’t make any sense, and two, it includes the pixels features which the concept can be done in just one software instead of me having to switching between Photoshop and Illustrator just to get the results that I want. If Adobe want everyone to rely on their software, they should bring back the perpetual license.
I think the pixel features, brush tools, etc are the main attraction for Affinity Designer. The cost is not really comparable since these there's a very big difference in the capabilities of these tools. Its really like comparing the price of a car to the price of a truck then having a "preference" the cheaper one, because its cheaper. But if you need the truck, you need the truck regardless of the price. It talk about cost, you have to compare two trucks, one Chevy and one Ford. Then you can say, I'm saving money with one over the other. That's not the case with these programs.
Which one would you say has stronger typography? Main reason I want to purchase
Do you know what is the best file format to use when you export an design that you want people to be able to customize them self with their own software; like changing the colors of individual items, for example the hair color of an avatar? Thank you.
.svg or .eps
@@nifeab Thank you!
Nice video !! Please make a video on Affinity Photo vs Adobe Photoshop.
Thank you for the suggestion, we'll keep that in mind. Stay tuned ;)
STOP 0:25 "1897" ??? Do you mean 1997 When illustrator was launched is that what you mean because it's not 1897 hell we did not have computers @ that time.
Thanks a lot for the feedback, silly me xD I made a mistake and forgot to make it explicit during editing
Lol. I picked up on that too and had to go back a few seconds to verify what I thought I heard.
The first version of Illustrator was 1987 actually.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣😊
I was a long time Illustrator user (since Illustrator 88) who dumped it due to disgust with the subscription scheme and moved to Affinity. In general, I like Affinity but there are many upgrades Designer needs before it's a true professional level program. It's the weakest link in the Affinity suite.
Thanks a lot for the feedback! It's true that the pricing plans do set them apart in a way.. We're planning to explore the rest of the Affinity Suite in upcoming videos too
I believe they are all equally weak if you're comparing them to expensive software like Adobe, Corel, or Quark. I was also disappointed by the subscription pricing, but that didn't change the fact that I still needed Adobe software for my work.
Still hoping they fix the bugged boolean tools, been there since launch
hello, i'm considering buying the Afinitty Photo for my work. But considering it costs over 300 brazilian reals, i am in doubt. What are these upgrades you mentioned? Do you think it affects the usage of Afinnity Photo as a proffesional software? Thanks in advance.
0:22 Adobe Illustrator definitely wasn't launched in 1897. You got the numbers in the wrong order. It was launched to the public in 1987.
This is an amazing video comparison
New Affinity Designer 2.0 has filled most missing features except image tracing. But, for this you find freeware on the net.
AF is now def the better choice, especially as it costs nothing compared to Adobe Illustrator
should i get affinity on my ipad or does it work better on a computer
Nice and informative! 😊👍
Thanks! We're glad that it was useful
Has affinity 2 narrowed the gap in terms of cut, mesh tools, etc?
Plus affinity always runs black friday sales deals lowering the price down below 40.00 USD.
I have been using Illustrator and Photoshop since that's what I've been using since college and up to my graphic design career, but seeing how Adobe's ridiculous subscription price and it's hidden and questionable charges, I decided to opt in with Affinity since it's perpetual licensing and I get to own the software forever, However, Affinity still lacks all the essentials I need in designing, since I am looking for the same tools I am using in Illustrator. Hopefully, Serif step up their game and improve their software to better.
0:22 1897? What does she mean?
Affinity Designer and VectorStyler make a good combination of software to own.
Am a graphic designer, projects are hard to come and if one choose to subscribe monthly for graphic tools how would I pay next month subscription payment if there are no job coming in? Subscription eat the artist profits.
Wait! 1897?!? you mean Adobe Illustrator was already 92 years old when I started using it?! DANG!!! must of had some super steampunk computers back in 1897!!
And I though I was the only one that picked on this 🤣, I feel like an old frack!
@@soniaollivier1336 😆
There's just so much missing from Affinity to really consider it. No shape builder and recolor artwork is a deal breaker. And there being a complete lack of simple things like a diffuse blending mode is just crazy, because people have been asking for it since 2017. There's a whole bunch of stuff from Photo that should be in Designer, but isn't, and it's been so many years since a meaningful update I've lost hope for it. They need to start getting off their ass with it, because it's a huge shame how it's been in limbo as basically a Beta program for so long.
Oh yes, there is a laundry list of features missing and bugs from Affinity. Hoping they adres some of these tomorrow since there is a big announcement. Been using their suite for 3 years now, 8+ hours a day. Still won't switch back to Adobe for now. The meat and potato tools are all fine, some even better than Adobe. For me at least.
Thanks for the video. Affinity designer works for me, as I am a casual non professional user. AI is probably better but i'm not willing to pay 20€ / month for what I need.
Thank you for the feedback! We totally agree. It's true that half of our team relies exclusively on the Adobe Suite almost all the time (for editing, design, motion graphics...etc.), but we still use the Affinity pack for various purposes. The price, intuitiveness and overall great performance are some of its greatest selling points
Wow...didn't know that Illustrator was launched before computers or electricity was being used in most homes.
;)
It was one silly mistake of mine indeed xD lol.. I forgot to fix it during editing. Thank you for the feedback :')
#TeamAffinity
I picked Affinity Great Price Excellent features, however, not enough effects!
Thanks for this. I am so new to art and design and looking at all options. I'll have to check and see if you did a comparison with Inkscape as well.
Unrelated: at the 8:00 mark I just have to say that I LOVE the style! I keep gravitating towards art done in that style and I don't have a name for it.
I can't and won't get illustrator, but the designer works flawless with no problems. I won't design anything besides small adds.Right now, it is just 40.00. You can't beat that.
Amazing video overall. Very detailed. Thank you so much!
Launched in 1897 ?? :)
I didn’t know illustrator came out in 1897 lol!
i love working in photoshop as a designer, but everytime i need to do something in illustrator... this program sucks the joy out of my soul, words can't describe how bad the workflow in illustrator is compared to photoshop, i know they work with two different standards but oh my god, simple tools that exist in both programs are completely different, hidden behind somehwere in illustrator or needing a 20 clicks process to be done instead of one click like in photoshop, i'm considering affinity designer to escape this hell.
Illsutrator was issued in 1897????
Holly molly Adobe and compueters have been around for ever!
After watching this ithink im gonna use affinity to start learning graphic designer
She said 1897. I didn't know they had computers back then🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I think the majority of people saying Adobe is expensive is because they aren't using the programs to the full extent they are capable of. Just mention Adobe fonts/Typekit. Need a font and it's in Typekit? You just saved hundreds of dollars and then your subscription has paid for itself. It has definitely saved me many times at my job! They now also have some variable fonts where you can get exactly the weight, style etc for your font.
Not to mention if you have a full CC subscription, you instantly have access to TONS of Adobe programs beyond the big 3.
AND there are constantly updates coming out for CC.
I would still say it IS a BIT expensive, but not nearly as people make it out to be. Also considering that it is a way better deal than the CS packages used to be where you would drop, what was it like $600 per program every year or two?
What I do wish though is that there were much cheaper, stripped down versions available for people. The problem is catering to the high end designers who will benefit greatly off of all its tools while leaving behind the casual designers who want a few tools and don't need all the bells and whistles. It really seems like a huge missed opportunity with Adobe to not offer a low-cost basic version OR to even offer their now very outdated, though still very usable, CS6 versions at a much lower cost.
Also, not sure why the video says Illustrator can only zoom in 900%. It definitely can go more than that. I don't remember exactly how much off the top of my head and it's on my other computer but yeah. Definitely more than 900%. lol
When Illustrator originally “launched in 1897”, it was just a dip pen and bottle of ink 🙂. You had to hire the nibs by monthly subscription
Shape builder.
just combine both and become GOD
Right from the getgo, they are biased towards illustrator, it shows in their tone
Illustrator is the industry-standard vector tool and comparing it to Affinity Designer when it comes to a professional work situation is just wrong/silly imo. If you are a hobbyist or beginner then Affinity might be for you, depending on what your end goal is.
I've worked with illustrator professionally since 2001 and since my clients send me .ai, .eps, and .pdf -files (in that order) and expect those same files back, Affinity is not an option. Also, if an Adobe CC subscription is too expensive for you then you are not a professional by any stretch of the imagination. Sure, I do wish it was cheaper!
Comparing these two programs is kinda like comparing FreeCad to Solidworks or Blender to Maya...and I love Blender btw!
What is industry-standard? Do you know how old the PDF format is? Illustrator is basically just a PDF editor (.ai = PDF, just rename the extension, and EPS gets PDF with a double-click on any Mac). So if you can open, edit and save a PDF, you are basically industry standard. That applies to roughly every vector tool from the late 1990's. Even 2001 Freehand 10 can run 100% commercial grade in 2022. So Affinity will be as industry-grade as anything else. With a way more attractive pricing. Like that manual screwdriver that never stops working.
What is not so industry-standard, is that Illustrator after nearly 35 years still misses the third connector type: the triangle. How professional is that? You just can pick them out: those logo's with bad straight-to-curve connections. All made in Illustrator by not-so-professional artists.
Affinity Designer 2.2 is the best one!!! Have all off illistrator and more, better.
here after the clip studio paint subscription update on version 2.0 incident
Eventually, everything will be a subscription. Even automobile features. You want heated seats? Enable it with a subscription, after you've already bought the car. This is the nature of capitalism and the future of the world.
I had no idea that adobe products were that old
1897??? Am I hearing right???
"1897"?🤔
1897 ? 😊😅😅😅
Features wise Illustrator
Agreed. But Designer has the price and the intuitiveness advantages. I love the persona-based workflows
@@InspirationTuts2D True, hopefully the dev team for Affinity Designer will prioritize tools like the Shape Builder and etc ... Then it'll completely over take the Adobe's products.
@@InspirationTuts2D Intuitiveness is a matter of personal preference. I imagine that it has a lot to do with past experiences. I find Illustrator to be more intuitive. I like that I can do far, far more things while holding 1 tool. In AD, I have to make lots of trips back to the toolbox. For example. You select the rectangle tool. You draw a rectangle. Then immediately drag/copy it. Not possible in AD. You have to make a trip to the toolbox to select a different tool to drag/copy it. So, which one is more intuitive? I don't know, but I do know which one will copy the rectangle faster. This is the truth with each and every single tool. If you're holding the eyedropper tool in Illustrator, you can do so many other things that you can almost forget that you're holding the eyedropper tool. I would not call any of that intuitive. If you don't know it, then there's nothing about the tools that are telling you that you can do it. So, maybe this is not intuitive. But, none of that is remotely possible in AD. What we find is that being more "intuitive" is probably less important than being more capable. For sure, the workflow is much faster in Illustrator.
afd has better tools for drawing.. but illustrator has better tools for creating logos and it also has a tool for transforming vector into fake 3d
Video needs to be redone. Watching it in 2024 is like seeing a dinosaur. Affinity designer has upgrade way pass those limitations since
she said illustrator was launched in 1897
She meant 1997
1897 😅
Am I listeing to a child, or to a robot voice?
Nice, BUT, highlighting differences must be with some GAPS/PAUSES, including TEXT HEADINGS. And if possible that ROBOTIC Voice must be avoided.
1897
I wouldn’t even use illustrator, if it was better. Adobe pushing their bloody subscription model down everyone’s throat has put them rather high on my “avoid business where possible“ list just below a certain Russian dictator…
Illustrator launched in 1897 eh? Hard to take a video serious when such glaring inaccuracies are published. Imagine publishing a video and saying the Spice Girls or Michael Jackson debuted in 1776, and not catching such an obvious impossibility.
The industry standard is becoming unreliable, bloated legacyware. So many options now.
There's only one real option. Coreldraw. This is the same as it's been for decades. Affinity Designer doesn't even begin to change this reality. AD is fine software, but it's not realistic or reasonable to compare it to these giant total solutions such as Illustrator or Coreldraw. But the comparison videos are entertaining and are great for people who love the idea that they can thumb their noses at Adobe and get something for practically nothing. But that's just a fantasy. You get what you pay for.
I ditched adobe for affinity since they also have cutcontour for Roland Verdsworks. Sweeeeet!! Bye bye Adobe
Whoever made this video is not a graphic designer, also doesn't use Illustrator and Designer.
Whoever made this video is clueless about using these programs. You can tell because during the video they showed an iPad and ProCreate.
That looked like Affinity Designer on the Ipad.
why some people said it's a nice video? it is just like a political speek, saying nothing real things. wast of time.
Do hate! And get a computer
Wast?
1897? 😂