It just all depends on what you want to do. And for just goofing around sketching, Zen Brush 3 is rather nice. Procreate, Clip Studio (for a yearly subscription), and Artstudio Pro are my top picks in that order for drawing and painting on iOS. It has a lot of features and does a lot of things Photoshop for desktop does, but it wasn't for me.Īffinity is NOT, however, a good painting or drawing program on the iPad, IMO. So if you buy Affinity, you gotta commit to learning it. Its your last chance to get 20 off Affinity Designer and Photo for Mac, PC and iPad, as well as creativity-boosting brush packs - including DAUB Watercolours & Washes, Xenon, Grave. I'm an old dog who's been working in Photoshop since 1995 (pre layers!), and learning new tricks was hard, so I bit the bullet, got the PS subscription (and subsequently the whole Cloud) so I've given up doing any kind of photo-manipulating on the iPad and do all my Photoshopping and Vector Illustrating on my PC. I don't like the way you have to switch schemas (or whatever Affinity calls it) to do different tasks, and it was taking me forever to learn. However, there's a tremendous learning curve to it. For the iPad, Affinity is definitely the superior product over the version of Photoshop Adobe came out with a couple years ago. I got Affinity a while ago before Photoshop was a full product on iOS. I own both Affinity and the full Adobe Cloud subscription.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |