![]() and keep the liquifying on a face to a very minimum. – better in my opinion to use tonal changes along the edges forms to be more subtle about “improving” features etc. Ie pushing the mouth and nose too freely on a portrait which basically changes the character of a persons bone structure. Teaching style was great – very approachable.Ĭonstructive criticism - some uses of the techniques shown seem a bit heavy handed in my opinion and may lead people to do the same. This is the first tutorial of Aaron’s I’ve gone through and really enjoyed it and would definitely recommend it. I launched a search, could not find it alas.Very Good Tutorial! A couple of the techniques were very useful for a current project I had going at the time…thank you. Now back on topic: wouldn´t it be nice to have a list ordered / organised like published here, for that other product? Pinned here just like this one. It will complement my already existing toolset quite nicely. Congrats with your 2015 Apple Design Award! Develop´, I couldn´t resist and got Affinity Designer as well from the AppStore, yesterday evening. I have watched the tutorials in the list in the order given since last week. ![]() Especially liked one of the last comments in the presentation: ´No Subscription´. It feels so good to have Affinity Photo on the HD already, instead of the Adobe monster. I am using Photoshop CS6, Photo Suite 9.5 (stand alone and plugins) and NIK components with all my raw files. Stumbling through video's and searching YouTube and Google for additional information to understand how to use your products.that is not so exciting.įantastic new product I´m mighty impressed with it already (except for its speed with opening my Fujifilm X-Trans raw files). ![]() So the discovery of Affinity Design and Photo is very exciting to me. I spent a lot of time learning Illustrator and enough of Photoshop to do what I need and I am disgusted with Adobe's switch to subscription based software availability. From what I can see the information available under Affinity Photo Help is bare bones at best and some of the bones are missing. This is especially true for a new software that hasn't been around long enough for authors to fill the void with How To books. So is knowing I have a reference, provided by the developer, that explains what every tool, panel, and menu option is and what it does, as though the person reading it has never worked with this software before. I don't understand the idea among developers that their job begins and ends with the software and users will fumble and stumble and guess their way to a working knowledge of the program. Simply reply to this pinned topic.īest wishes from the Affinity Documentation Team!įirst I will say that I am very happy to see this software and impressed with what I have seen so far.with one exception. Please let us know about areas you think need covering, have problems with, don’t understand, or just tell us if we’re on the right or wrong track. These tend to be released on a more informal basis. In addition to the regular tutorials, we've also got some workflow videos shot on the Windows version of Photo that cover using a variety of features to edit an image to completion. Uplift Epic Skies (1.6 Bonus Content) - YouTube / Vimeo Portrait Retouching Workflow - YouTube / Vimeo Nighttime Architecture Workflow - YouTube / Vimeo Wide Colour Profiles vs sRGB - YouTube / Vimeo
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