(12-09-2017, 07:01 PM)Asura Wrote: From my experience, you should get your hands on Photoshop and illustrator but I'm sure that's obvious.
(12-11-2017, 01:39 AM)NYTA Wrote: Imo Photoshop is a lot better than Affinity.
(12-11-2017, 04:14 AM)mothered Wrote: (12-09-2017, 07:01 PM)Asura Wrote: From my experience, you should get your hands on Photoshop and illustrator but I'm sure that's obvious.
I'll elaborate on the obvious and say that the designers at work use both (mostly Illustrator), and the results speak for themselves.
From what I've been told, It may take a little while to work out all features, tools etc, but It's well worth It.
Affinity Designer has a much better layout than Illustrator, and is much easier to use, which helps with getting started.
Photoshop isn't good for logos, since it wasn't made to create vector images, only pixel-based ones.
I'd try them all (I've tried Affinity and Illustrator, and I prefer Affinity), and see what you like. (I would not pay for them all, only pay for the one that you will be using for most of your workflow)
I used to use Illustrator and Affinity, and swapped between the two depending on the logo that I was making. However, my Macbook has a tiny SSD, so Illustrator took up a lot of space, and it's an ugly piece of software that I didn't like very much, so I uninstalled it.
That said, there have been logos that I was only able to create in Illustrator, and not Affinity. (I have no idea why)
If you are on Linux or BSD, Inkscape is likely your best option for vector graphics.
If you are only doing pixel-based work, use Photoshop or something like Pixelmator. GIMP has a lot of features, but they all feel too terrible to use.
If you are drawing, there is a ton of options. I'm looking at Paintstorm Studio and Sketchbook right now. If you are on Linux and drawing, then go with Krita, it seems nice.
Use Blender for anything 3d.