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atomic101

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Posts posted by atomic101

  1. Just to add: I think that a great deal of the new features in V2 (which I have paid for the suite already) are fanciful and can be well lived without, or possible never needed by most in a day to day agency/studio.

    But Masks are an everyday task, need.

    This is probably why I (as well as others) feel so strongly about this.

    V2 is perhaps the Lamborghini version with the gear knob missing.

  2. MEB, I am not "understanding". This is a basic need that should have been in V1. Not finding it in the latest version was pretty insulting as a user where we have been voicing that one need as priority for so, so long.

    I think that the product and the alternative to Adobe is great and very much needed. I only want to see it succeed (and rule supreme). But not having this from the start is like selling ladders where the first rung is missing. You can still use them, they might work great. But that first rung would be better there than not, and certainly make the whole experience a more rounded and efficient experience.

    What do we do in a photo editing app. Some small processing things that are no great shakes. Image manipulation. Photocompositing where masks and layers are bread and butter. Come on?

    Best

    J

  3. On 8/2/2016 at 4:12 PM, MEB said:

    Hi dddeux,

    Welcome to Affinity Forums :)

    Affinity Designer doesn't support geometric operations between closed paths and open paths (lines), so you cannot use a line to cut a shape in two separate paths.

    We already have  a Knife Tool in our roadmap that should be able to help here, but i don't know yet how it will work / how it will be imeplemented.

     

    Meanwhile there's a few ways to workaround this. You can extend the line around of one of the halves of the original object and close it then perform a divide geometry operation (you will end up with three shapes) and delete the superfluous one, or alternatively add nodes where you want to "break" the object and use the Node Tool to break them. You will then have to close the two resulting paths manually.

    Hi MEB, I am new to the Affinity product range. A change I took readily and keen to leave adobe that I had used for over 30 years. I am slowly experiencing real fundamental issues with lack of opposition and essential tools or plain strange ways of working. No Slice,Masking that drives me mental (Photo), previews I cannot understand and more. I have been trying to educate (re-educate) myself as much as possible, in the realisation that sometimes old ways are not the best ways. But I am finding that a hard notion to follow at times in this new Affinity world where really basic needs have not been met. Your last response on this was 2016, Surely if a slice tool were to be in a roadmap it should have reached its destination by now. Oh! an please tell me a fundamental video to watch to wrap my head around the crazy photo masking (cannot see the mask) dilemma. I am close to breaking -back. I really don't want to go there...

  4. Scenario

    You have a picture of a bottle of wine you want to crop. In Photoshop I would have grabbed the crop tool brought the left and right sides to line up with the edge of the vertical sides of the bottle. Then grabbed the crop handle in the middle vertical right side and whilst holding shift (If I remember right) dragged out till I had the space I required. The left side would automatically mirror my movement and I knew I had the crop central to the bottle in a visual sense.

    ??? How do I do this simple, fundamental thing in AP. Grateful for any enlightenment, I have tried and tried and searched videos galore.

  5. I have to say that whilst being an enthusiastic swapper from Adobe after Many years, I am really struggling with the Affinity masking scenario. I would really appreciate a definitive (even a "made for idiots" mentality) video to get all this clear in my mind. Even something that especially matters for people making the switch. Along the lines of "you know how you used to do this, well now you achieve that by doing this instead". I think a great deal more could be achieved by referencing the old ways whilst education on the new. The videos I have seen so far are slow, stale and not up to scratch, using elements that confuse the issue, rather than showing the mechanics.

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