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Illustrator and photoshop
Illustrator and photoshop





illustrator and photoshop

If I turn off all noisemakers (fan, aircon, etc) and do a userbenchmark test when it does the 3D animation I hear noises like faint metal screaming but the fans move just fine, I think the fans can't rev up leading to this issue. Secondly I am not 100% certain but I suspect my graphics card is broken. so I had to go and wipe all graphics drivers and reinstall this one in safe mode. Firstly I think the latest driver was corrupt for me as it didn't uninstall the old version and was crashing the Nvidia control panel and the GeForce Experience app showed both last two installed. Interestingly I have the same card but worse PC Specs, but it's always run beautifully for me. I promise, it’s all you need.Īnd if you do want to see a few examples of when (and how) I use PS, here are three tutorials ( notice, they all have a theme: editing raster / pixel based accents).I have not. Designers use PS because they don’t know how to do it the right way in AI.They’re written by HR or management who *think* you need Photoshop to sketch.So if you’re looking for a fashion design job and it says Illustrator and Photoshop proficiency required, don’t worry about Photoshop. I do 99% of my career related work in Illustrator. Some types of textile design (for patterns that require raster artwork or certain texture effects, Photoshop is more robust).Changing colors of raster based artwork.Creating technical sketches for tech packs and spec sheets.Laying out simple line sheets (if more than a few pages, use InDesign).Editing repeating pattern swatches ( rotating/scaling).Creating colorways or changing colors in your sketches.Filling fashion flats with colors or patterns (even if patterns are raster based).Here are the tasks you should do in each platform. So let me spell it out loud and clear for you. Yes, you can do some photo editing in AI, but it’s a fight. It’s like trying to edit photos in Illustrator. It boggles my mind because it’s not nearly as flexible or powerful as AI. I’m perplexed when designers sketch fashion flats in PS. PS should be used for photos (just look at the name: Photoshop), and AI should be used for pretty much everything else ( except multi-page layouts – but that’s an entirely different discussion).Īnd while yes, you can do vector in PS, the process is miserable and doesn’t work as well as AI. 10+ years later, I still only use Photoshop for that: editing or cropping photos. Doesn’t mean it’s the “right” one, it’s just the one you’re most comfortable in. What I’ve discovered over the years is that your “go to” platform is usually the one you learned first. Some people feel the opposite, not only loving Photoshop, but actually hating AI.







Illustrator and photoshop