Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
I can't speak to what's best for high end art, just my take on the applications: I started with Corel about 10+ years ago. I liked Draw well enough, but kept finding myself using an old copy of Photoshop Elements to deal with raster images. I just thought it was more intuitive than PhotoPaint. Then I switched to AI & PS for real, and definitely found the same thing. Adobe had just laid things out so well, especially in PS. And taking images back & forth between PS & AI has always felt smooth, too.Of course, an experienced user can do great things with either. But my preference is Adobe; for me, for what I do, easier to use, more intuitive. (And a larger community for support, so easier to get questions answered on the fly with a quick web search.)One thing I miss from CorelDraw- the manual kerning options for text were a lot easier to use than AI. But that's seriously the only thing I noticed lacking after switching.
there are a ton of vids on Photoshop and Illustrator. Adobe's website has tutorials, Lynda.com has some as well. You want to learn to use the tools pretty much the same way you do in Corel. Though I'm not a Corel user, all Mac, it is fully capable of producing high end art. Check out Advanced Artist, a great Corel resource, as far as I know anyway, I don't use it.Steve
Quote from: Prince Art on March 24, 2017, 12:05:07 PMI can't speak to what's best for high end art, just my take on the applications: I started with Corel about 10+ years ago. I liked Draw well enough, but kept finding myself using an old copy of Photoshop Elements to deal with raster images. I just thought it was more intuitive than PhotoPaint. Then I switched to AI & PS for real, and definitely found the same thing. Adobe had just laid things out so well, especially in PS. And taking images back & forth between PS & AI has always felt smooth, too.Of course, an experienced user can do great things with either. But my preference is Adobe; for me, for what I do, easier to use, more intuitive. (And a larger community for support, so easier to get questions answered on the fly with a quick web search.)One thing I miss from CorelDraw- the manual kerning options for text were a lot easier to use than AI. But that's seriously the only thing I noticed lacking after switching.Take I-beam and click inbetween two letters. Hold down alt/option key...use and click left or right arrows.
I'd say, time in craft.There's no "easy". You just gotta get down on it.Art is a journey. It's not a button on your keyboard.many have pointed to youtube and I concur. Folks like me are setting up webinars though. If you really wanna learn....hop on the train. We'll get you there. In the meantime...pencil-paper. Learn there then apply digital. there are no shortcuts.....Time in craft.