![]() If you're looking to learn vector graphics design, then Affinity Designer for iPad looks to be a good place to start. Affinity Designer review: Performance and usability Essentially, the iPad version is less than half the cost of the Windows and MacOS versions and is a fraction of the price of an Adobe CC Illustrator subscription, which will set you back £20 per month and is a desktop OS-only application. In fact, it's the price of £20 that's the principal attraction here. Essentially, Affinity Designer's counterpart is Adobe Illustrator and although it isn't as stacked with features, it's a lot, lot cheaper. It's different from a photo editing application in that the visuals it creates can be resized with no loss in quality. What is Affinity Designer, though? Well, It's a vector drawing application, principally used for the creation of graphics, signage, user interface widgets and game sprites and infographics. Affinity Designer review: What you need to know Affinity Designer is the most recent launch on the iPad but it's arguably more impressive than the rest, and it’s a powerful piece of creative software. The result is a pair of iPad apps that replicate, feature-for-feature, their desktop counterparts. ![]() Over the past five years or so it's been taking a different approach to mobile app development, tearing down its venerable Photo Plus and Draw Plus applications and rebuilding them from the ground up with cross-platform, more tablet-friendly code. ![]() The software just isn't there and, when it is, it can't match what's available for Windows 10 and MacOS users.ĭespite the increasing prevalence of productivity first tablets like Apple’s 12.9-inch iPad Pro and the Samsung Galaxy Tab S4, the creative software available on those platforms always seems to take a back seat in terms of features. ![]() Tablets, they used to say, aren't appropriate for use by creative professionals. ![]()
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