Inkscape vs Illustrator?
#3
Posted 09 March 2013 - 05:59 AM
Lets see..
Illustrator:
Pros;
Definitely the best vector software in the market with an awesome bundle of features. If you learn them all, you are a Pro.
Looks good on Portfolio
Gives you more what you need if you are just a graphic designer.
Cons;
OVERPRICED(heavily)...The only Heavy anchor slowing this Black pearl.
Inkscape:
Pros;
FREE... The mighty Armour.
features...sufficient for a good graphic designer. Can easily challenge Illustrator in almost everything..format support/tools/availability and all for free.
Cons:
lags or stops in most PCs, that is beacause of the updates..You have to install a few updates before you get the right one. The trick is..go for older updates if you have to, new is not necessarily the one for your PC.
Isn't famous as much as illustrator or corel. If you show that on a portfolio. The HR might not show it, but will take you as unprofessional.
My take: Use inkscape, earn a few bucks, get illustrator, get rid of this discussion, it has started to stink. :-p
- runnicdesign and dimullah like this
#5
Posted 26 May 2013 - 06:30 AM
Yes, its a good alternative.
Lets see..
Illustrator:
Pros;
Definitely the best vector software in the market with an awesome bundle of features. If you learn them all, you are a Pro.
Looks good on Portfolio
Gives you more what you need if you are just a graphic designer.
Cons;
OVERPRICED(heavily)...The only Heavy anchor slowing this Black pearl.
Inkscape:
Pros;
FREE... The mighty Armour.
features...sufficient for a good graphic designer. Can easily challenge Illustrator in almost everything..format support/tools/availability and all for free.
Cons:
lags or stops in most PCs, that is beacause of the updates..You have to install a few updates before you get the right one. The trick is..go for older updates if you have to, new is not necessarily the one for your PC.
Isn't famous as much as illustrator or corel. If you show that on a portfolio. The HR might not show it, but will take you as unprofessional.
My take: Use inkscape, earn a few bucks, get illustrator, get rid of this discussion, it has started to stink. :-p
If your work is good, you will get hired even if you used crayons. Inkscape can do pretty much anything Illustrator can, and for logo design, what else could you possibly need? Inkscape works great on Linux machines. For those of you who have bad experiences with Inkscape crashing, it's not Inkscape, it's Windows.
#6
Posted 26 May 2013 - 04:03 PM
I don't use Inkscape so I don't know if this is true anymore, but I have read that Inkscape does not support cmyk/spot colors or profiles. If so then that is a major issue for logo and print design. So that is one reason why Illustrator would be better.If your work is good, you will get hired even if you used crayons. Inkscape can do pretty much anything Illustrator can, and for logo design, what else could you possibly need? Inkscape works great on Linux machines. For those of you who have bad experiences with Inkscape crashing, it's not Inkscape, it's Windows.
#7
Posted 12 June 2013 - 05:49 PM
#9
Posted 12 June 2013 - 11:11 PM
Oh ok, thankyou for the information. Maybe what I was reading that day was inaccurate. I kept hearing about using Scribus for output..Inkscape does indeed support CMYK profiles. Not real simple nor right "out of the box" though. Google "inkscape cmyk" for more info.
#12
Posted 09 August 2013 - 05:22 PM
#14
Posted 26 August 2013 - 12:30 PM
#17
Posted 26 September 2013 - 12:01 PM
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