What graphics art program does everyone use?
metomeya
New
I was wondering cause right now i'm using macromedia Fireworks, cause it came with the bundle i purchased. While it is a powerful graphics program, it has a few faults that I really hate. One being the text it puts on any computer has horrible resolution.
Anyways graphics program does everyone use? And which is the best?
I used to only use photoshop, but I lost it and its an old version now anyways. I've been hearing good things about adobe's stuff.
Anyways graphics program does everyone use? And which is the best?
I used to only use photoshop, but I lost it and its an old version now anyways. I've been hearing good things about adobe's stuff.
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Two years ago, I bought a coupla books for Photoshop, one was a course with lessons, came with a CD that had programmed one hour lessons. The other was a quick guide at how to get fancy results quickly.
The latter was quite good, managed a few good text thingies, but it wasn't really teaching me, I was just following the instructions.
One day, I'll actually set some time aside and learn this thing, all I use it for now is basic rotate/resize/change contrast & tone etc.
I have only one person and one reason to blame for my ignorance of this program - myself & my laziness :o
I am curious what version you used to have of Photoshop btw?
Actually, Fireworks was not intended to do GOOD to EXCELLENT print-quality graphics. It was intended for web graphics, on screen only.
To get decent print fonts, try Photoshop, or any of Corel's products. Corel uses Bitstream fonts AND ttf (TrueType Fonts), Photoshop uses mostly ttf. From Corel Draw I can gen either print or web graphics, for web I use 96x96 to 100x100 and NOT 72x72. 72x72 WILL look rough on a high-quality monitor, the edges will jaggy in strange places. 96x96 does not look Bad on my 80x81 PPI monitor, a tiny tib of jaggy but not much. On a 72x72 monitor, probably ditto (I have dropped my res here such that I can emulate about a 70x71 PPI density as far as effective density to check). So, I gen 96x96 PPI graphics sans text, drop text in ttf or bitstream vector fonts on top of that layer, and then have the program convert the text to curves and then embed text into bottom layer. I save the result. THEN I web-tune that result, and get smooth curves as they are vector-math edged totally and the browser and computer can regen the edges for the display mode. Now I'll tell you the other half of that trick, the web-tuned result also prints decently but not perfect.
I seemed before the internet corel was hands down the program for image work.
by the way Thrax, what would you consider a good program for vector work? Causes thats usually what i mess with and photoshop (i thought I just didn't know how to use it right) like you said doesn't do it too well (the older version i had).
Illustrator ranks the same for vector artwork.
After Effects is the most powerful 2D motion software. From there your next step is a Henry or a Flame.
There is truth in that. These programs are just tools. If you were to change DaVinci's paintbrush then would he no longer be an artist?
A powerful PC with state of the art software will only allow the user to collide with a mistake that much faster. It's not the tool. It's the artist who controls it.
I use Paint Shop Pro for photos and other single layer edits. I use Fireworks for Multi-layer graphics, and all of my from-scratch web graphics.
I use photoshop for awhile, and while it was useful for editing photos, I found it unwieldy for creating new graphical elements from scratch.
Thanks everyone,
Alex
No insult intended, but the Dummies books are great, well written and informative. My wife is currently working her way through the Photoshop one, and I have glanced through it. Having used Photoshop for about 10 years, my opinion is that it is a very good resource.
Dexter...
*Smells*
Breathtaking.
If you have an income: Photoshop HANDS DOWN
If you are a 13 year old nerd with no income (like more the half the internet is): Get the GIMP (its free!)
lol, true.
the thread shall never DIE! :necro: :kneel:
PSP is owned by Corel now. It's a great program that's easy on the wallet. I've used Photoshop a little, but can't afford the price. Photosop is a good program to get if you can afford it.
Adobe Illustrator is OK, but I prefer FreeHand - it's easier to learn and does a great job. I guess basically it's what you are use to using. Maybe you could download the trial versions and then go from there.
Wink