ChatterBank2 mins ago
Photoshop Alternatives
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Struggling with Photoshop 'Elements' (cheap, but mainly because many of Photoshop's higher-level functions are missing), and I thought of signing up for the £10 a month Photoshop cc, which gives you the full monty.
Seemed expensive, so looked around, and found Affinity Photo - what a brilliant program, all for £48, with extensive English-voiced (i.e. not American) YouTube video instructions. Does the lot, all the fancy stuff that only Photoshop cc can do.
It's the old story - I used Photoshop because I used Photoshop. Not a good reason, and now I'm an ex-Photoshop user.
I'm sure there's other areas of technology where it's more habit than choice (my Apple, for example)... We pay over the odds because we always have!
BB
Seemed expensive, so looked around, and found Affinity Photo - what a brilliant program, all for £48, with extensive English-voiced (i.e. not American) YouTube video instructions. Does the lot, all the fancy stuff that only Photoshop cc can do.
It's the old story - I used Photoshop because I used Photoshop. Not a good reason, and now I'm an ex-Photoshop user.
I'm sure there's other areas of technology where it's more habit than choice (my Apple, for example)... We pay over the odds because we always have!
BB
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It's 'horses for courses' when it comes to image-manipulation software.
Photoshop is great but it's got a massive learning curve. (I use Photoshop 6, which is ancient but still does all the key stuff).
GIMP (which is free) can do everything that Photoshop can but, again, with a steep learning curve. (I've got GIMP on my computer too). It can actually be quite tricky for experienced Photoshop users to switch to GIMP, as some things need to be handled in a completely different way.
Serif has always offered superb software and, until fairly recently, they offered older editions of many of their programs free of charge. I've used both the free and paid-for stuff that they offer, with PagePlus being my DTP program of choice. I find it slightly annoying that they seem to have merged most of their separate titles (e.g. PhotoPlus, which was a great image-manipulation program) into the Affinity brand but I'm unsurprised that you find it easy to use.
There are still some decent freebies available though. Irfanview, for example, is principally known as an image-viewer but, if you 'look under the bonnet', it's actually a really good image processor as well. (You can use Adobe plug-ins with it, extending its inherent capabilities). If I only need to make a few tweaks to an image it will be Irfanview that I look to first.
Paint.NET also has plenty of fans here on AB.
Photoshop is great but it's got a massive learning curve. (I use Photoshop 6, which is ancient but still does all the key stuff).
GIMP (which is free) can do everything that Photoshop can but, again, with a steep learning curve. (I've got GIMP on my computer too). It can actually be quite tricky for experienced Photoshop users to switch to GIMP, as some things need to be handled in a completely different way.
Serif has always offered superb software and, until fairly recently, they offered older editions of many of their programs free of charge. I've used both the free and paid-for stuff that they offer, with PagePlus being my DTP program of choice. I find it slightly annoying that they seem to have merged most of their separate titles (e.g. PhotoPlus, which was a great image-manipulation program) into the Affinity brand but I'm unsurprised that you find it easy to use.
There are still some decent freebies available though. Irfanview, for example, is principally known as an image-viewer but, if you 'look under the bonnet', it's actually a really good image processor as well. (You can use Adobe plug-ins with it, extending its inherent capabilities). If I only need to make a few tweaks to an image it will be Irfanview that I look to first.
Paint.NET also has plenty of fans here on AB.
Easier to keep using than relearning - yes, indeed, Woof, which is why I nearly signed up with the ten quid a month Photoshop full version.
But then I thought ***, I've been paying money to Adobe for decades now, so let's see what else is going.
I did the same with my Mac a few years back - dropped my iMac for a Mac Mini with a (whisper) Dell screen. Huge difference in price compared with Mac-badged monitors, but is there a difference?
Likewise Quark - been using it since the 1980s, but I'm starting to wonder....
BillB
But then I thought ***, I've been paying money to Adobe for decades now, so let's see what else is going.
I did the same with my Mac a few years back - dropped my iMac for a Mac Mini with a (whisper) Dell screen. Huge difference in price compared with Mac-badged monitors, but is there a difference?
Likewise Quark - been using it since the 1980s, but I'm starting to wonder....
BillB