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iMatt

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Posts posted by iMatt

  1. In Windows Settings, I noticed Affinity Designer taking up 1.03 GB of disk space. Photo taking up 1.06 GB and Publisher consuming 1.04 GB.

    In contrast, Affinity Designer 2.0 takes up just over a tenth of version 1.XX, a mere 109 MB!!! Photo and Publisher are similar at 106 MB and 112 MB respectively! Why do version 2.0 apps use so much less space? Are they a lot less bloated?

  2. 3 hours ago, Dangerous said:

    Affinity is already classed as a suite but only sold as 3 individual programs. While what you say can't be ruled out there is a big market for just AP (photographers) and just AD (budding designers) and a big market for all 3. Serif offers are already good value & I can't see them giving further discounts if you buy all 3 in a 'half price sale'

    Perhaps. But do remember that prior to Creative Suite, Adobe bundled Photoshop, Illustrator, PageMaker and Acrobat in one box set - not quite a suite yet as they were still separate progs. When InDesign Came on the scene, they offered that instead of PageMaker as an option. The PageMaker bundle was aimed at business and the InDesign bundle was aimed at graphic designers. Whilst you could still purchase each prog separately, Adobe offered generous discounts on purchasing them all together. The same happened with MS where you could at one time purchase Word, Excel, PowerPoint, etc separately. But it made more sense to purchase them as Office if you needed two or more progs.

    Now, Serif is not Adobe or MS. However, any incentive to get people to purchase all three major progs at once could be in Serifs favour. The very competitive price point right now, however, may make it less worthwhile. UNLESS Serif raises prices of the individual titles and makes a sweet/bundle come in at a price where you'd be stupid not to buy Designer, Photo and Publisher that way.

  3. In the presentation, there was mention of Affinity as a suite of programs. Could we see a unified installer a la Office or CorelDraw? Purchase Affinity Suite V 2.0 for say $120/£120. Or buy each separate prog, Designer, Photo and Publisher for $50/£50 each. I would also like to see something lie 'Affinity Web'. A web design prog based on the graphics capabilities of Designer and Photo. With the page layout abilities of Publisher.

  4. 14 hours ago, ljredux said:

    I guess I'll check-in every couple of weeks to see if there's any news.  I'm not buying V1 now if V2 is imminent and I have to buy it all over again to stay current.

    Thanks for the replies. 🙂

    It may well be that if you purchase Affinity 1.XXX after a certain date, you get Affinity 2.0 free. I should imagine Affinity 2.0 will be generously discounted for users of 1.XXX anyway. And there may well be an introductory 2.0 price to boot.

  5. 7 minutes ago, markw said:

    If you have Photo you could edit the image in that by using; File > Edit in Photo...  And once in Photo go to; Filters > Colours > Erase White Paper and then send it back to Designer.
    A quick and dirty method might be to set the Layer’s blend mode to Multiply. Any content under white areas would then show through.

    THANK YOU! It worked like a charm. Will make a screenshot of your helpful reply in case I ever forget!

  6. Just now, markw said:

    If you have Photo you could edit the image in that by using; File in Photo...  And once in Photo go to; Filters > Colours > Erase White Paper and then send it back to Designer.
    A quick and dirty method might be to set the Layer’s blend mode to Multiply. Any content under white areas would then show through.

    Ok, will give this a go a bit later. Thanks.

  7. Just now, loukash said:

    Which part?

    • The whole canvas?
    • The brown rectangle?
    • The white rectangle with the black pattern?

    I'd be much more interested to see your expanded Layers panel, rather than an irrelevant collection of brushes and effects… ;)

    I'd have thought it obvious! How can I mean the whole canvas! And how can it be the brown rectangale when i mentioned the BLACK image?

  8. A design studio/print shop/ad agency will almost certainly want you to dive into Adobe progs such as Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, Dreamweaver, etc. right away. There will be no leaning curve or training! The questions you need to answer therefore are have you used Adobe progs before? If so, how long ago? If somewhat rusty, you may well be able to get back up to speed. However, you'll be almost certainly competing with someone who knows these progs like the back of his or her hand!

    As Walt says, you can lie or and attempt to 'wing it' as it were. But you may well get found out.

    The biggest issue you'll find if you've never use Adobe titles or have used them some time ago is that the workflow will be different to Affinity in key areas. Any employer will want you to work the Adobe way rather than the Affinity (or Corel or Xara) way.

    And yes, I did use Adobe CS and CorelDraw prior to Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher.

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