Adobe Illustrator VS Affinity Designer Every Tool

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what's up youtube have you ever wondered how the tools inside of a free designer and adobe illustrator compare well that's what we're here to talk about today okay so a couple months ago i made a video comparing all the tools inside of adobe photoshop and affinity photo looking at each one and seeing which ones were there in infinity photo and which ones were missing and maybe anything that affinity photo had that adobe photoshop did not have and now i would like to do that for the vector program to find designer and adobe illustrator but as i was going through the tools in preparation for this video i realized that the differences between these two programs go even deeper than the differences between the photo programs the photo programs are actually more comparable across the board to each other than the vector programs and that's not to say that in the vector programs one is clearly better and one is clearly worse it's just to say that the differences go deeper and i think there's two reasons for this i think the first one is history adobe illustrator has this long history spanning over decades of being one of the primary design programs as they've gone along they've produced a lot of different tools to do a lot of different things and some of those tools have kind of become obsolete as different innovations have happened but they've always kept the tools around this is true in photoshop as well to some extent but it seemed to be even more of an issue inside of adobe illustrator i've been using adobe illustrator for years and years and there were tools that i found while prepping for this video that i didn't even know existed there and that just shows how many tools and the proliferation of tools that have happened in adobe illustrator and so part of that is history they build something and they keep it around for legacy users who might want to keep using that thing the other issue is one of philosophy really it seems like adobe illustrator wants to provide you with as many options to do as many things as possible and that produces a lot of overlap often between tools and between different ways of doing things within the context menus and within the panels of the program and affinity seems much more focused on providing you with just one way of doing that same thing and so for example adobe illustrator as we will see will have a bunch of transform tools within it shear scale rotate flip all of these tools and these are all things that can be done from the panels as well whereas in a fiend designer we will only see most of those options within the panels or within the existing move and select tools and so there's a lot less duplication but that also means a lot less customizability within each of these so you've got to take this for what it's worth this video is a comparison of the tools in the toolbar of each program and a number of people commented on my photo and photoshop video and said that i wasn't doing it right because i didn't look at every single feature within the programs but i just can't do that within a video here on youtube i can't look at every feature within one video so the focus of this video is just to look at the tools if you're looking for something else you might want to search youtube for a specific video on a specific function that being said if you know that i've missed something in this video please do go ahead and drop it in the comments and let me know what that is because then other people can see that and we can all learn more and more together so let's go ahead let's dive in let's look at adobe illustrator and a feed designer and see how the tools in each of them compare okay so here we are now in both applications so i have adobe illustrator on the left and a fan designer on the right i've just put a red rounded rectangle on each board so that if we do need to look at something particular we have an object to work on it with so like i said what i'm going to do is compare the tools along each left-hand side so we're going to be looking at these tools i've tried to make sure that all of the tools are there some of the ones in affinity seem to only appear if you tell them to so the way that you get them to show up is you actually go up to view this is an affinity and then you go down to customize tools and this gives you the option to put in any tools now what you can see probably right off the bat is that illustrator has way more tools like i was talking about before there are just tons and tons of tools inside of illustrator let's just start taking a look we're going to go down the list here so first off in illustrator we have the selection tool this allows you to select objects and move them around over in effing designer we obviously have a tool that looks very similar it's the move tool uses the same keyboard shortcut and it allows you to select objects move them around both of these allow you to resize objects etc all right we're going to keep going down the list in illustrator and we'll pick up any tools that didn't correspond to an illustrator one and a fan designer at the end okay so we have the direct selection tool and inside of the direct selection tool we have the group selection tool so direct selection tool of course allows you to target specific points and move them around i'll hit command z to reset it over here in effing designer we have what's called the node tool and the node tool allows you to select points and move them around but what you'll notice here there's something a little bit different when you click on this shape and that is that i can't actually select individual nodes even though i'm using the node tool i can change the corner radius but i can't do anything else and the reason for that is just that in a fine designer shapes remain live shapes until you tell them to not be live shapes anymore so you have to come over here and my menu is smaller because i'm only using half the screen but you come over here and you click convert to curves then we could come and we can select individual points and move them around at that point though there's going to be something different we can no longer select our corner and change the corner here so there are differences between these and you just have to learn the differences in the ways that you work with them so just because two tools look the same and do similar things does not mean they will be exactly the same in illustrator or fiend designer okay let's keep moving down here so we have the magic wand tool and this is a selection tool and we're not doing any pixel based work but that is actually found in the pixel persona in affinity designer so if you go to the pixel persona in the top the tools will change and this is much more like photoshop set of tools very similar tool set to the basic tools found in affinity photo so we have a magic wand tool right here but it's called the flood select tool in this case one thing i forgot to mention was this group selection tool there is no equivalent of the group selection tool in a finding designer but you can select groups from the layers panel or using the selection tool okay let's keep moving down we have the lasso tool so we can do a lasso select here and of course we have a lasso tool over here but you can see it doesn't work in the same way right so this will let you lasso select points this lasso tool is actually making a pixel selection they're not the same thing even though they look similar right let me go ahead and hit command d to deselect there jump back into the persona here we can actually do a selection across like that so we can achieve a similar but it's going to be a lot harder to maybe do exactly the same thing because the lasso select allows you to get more refined the two lassos are not equivalent the lasso in affinity designer is really the lasso from photoshop and affinity photo okay next let's go to the pen tool here so this is going to be very similar to what we saw in photoshop a few weeks ago but the pen tool here will of course allow you to draw a line and then it has some sub tools you have a plus anchor point delete anchor point and then the anchor point tool of course you can draw out a line like that now in the pen tool over here in a fiend designer we can do pretty much the same thing so we can use both of these to draw lines hit escape to stop drawing a line they're essentially the same thing but the pen tool inside of affinity designer just has all of those like adding in anchor points and that kind of thing built into it as opposed to over here you have the option to go into a specific mode just to add or delete anchor points very similar tools in that respect but they are a little bit different and if you're used to working one way in illustrator and you switched over to a frame you would have to kind of relearn a few things in order to do things a little differently okay next we have this curvature tool so the curvature tool allows you to adjust points as curves and so it's kind of like a pen tool but instead of drawing straight lines or manually trying to control each of your curves it will kind of just curve based on where you go this is not a tool that i use a lot let me just move that and it does not have an equivalent inside of affinity designer so you have the pen tool and you would have to draw your curves like this so not as free-flowing not as easy all right marching down the list here we have the type tool and under the type tool similar to what we saw in photoshop we have lots and lots of different type options whereas when we come over to the a icon here which is the artistic text tool we have the frame text tool and the artistic text tool inside of a filling designer a lot less options and i mentioned this in the photoshop video but text is an area where affinity has really struggled and especially things like being able to do special things with text for example over here we have like the vertical type tool now it can type on a path you just have to place it on the path there are things that it can do that are in these areas but it doesn't handle text as well and especially there's been trouble as i've said with right to left text things that don't run in the standard kind of western left to right top to bottom those are where we tend to have a lot more trouble inside of a fitting designer but both programs obviously can do text okay the line tool there is no line tool in a fan designer there's only the pen tool for drawing lines so that's basically what you've got so here you can actually draw a line with that line tool and over here in finger designer you are going to have to draw that line with the pen tool underneath the line tool you have another set of tools related to lines that illustrator has that affinity designer does not have the arc tool the spiral tool the rectangular grid tool and the polar grid tool these are all things that we do not have inside of affinity designer and this is where you can start to see what i was talking about there is a proliferation of tools inside of illustrator and you can see just by looking at them even without looking at all the tools that are nested you can see that this tools list is way longer okay we'll keep moving on down the way here so we've got this rectangle tool and the rectangle tool contains inside a bunch of different shape tools rounded rectangle ellipse polygon star and the flare tool now if we go over here to affinity designer what we're going to see are a bunch of shapes these blue ones are all shapes and we have a rectangle an ellipse and a rounded rectangle that are always there and available and then you can see here we also have a bunch of other shape tools that are found underneath so we've got things like the triangle tool diamond trapezoid i won't read them all off again like i did in the photo one but we've got a bunch of different shape tools and i can already see that for some reason affinity has gone ahead and taken some of my tools away so i'm going to need to bring those back up i'm not sure if this was just a bug introduced in affinity 1.9.1 that's the most current version and that's what i'm running but my tools seem to disappear and i have to bring them back from time to time so let's go ahead and go to the view and i never noticed that happening before let's go to customize tools and we're going to drag some of these tools back in and the reason i noticed it is you can add different shape tools in that you want and one shape tool that is only available if you add it in specifically is this cat tool now why there's a cat tool in affinity i don't know it basically just draws out a vector cat now adobe illustrator relies a lot on you creating your own shapes which i think most graphic designers do create their own shapes but it is kind of nice infinity to just have all of these other shapes available to you if and when you need them all right so as far as shape tools go i think that affinity really wins this one i don't know why adobe insists on sticking with just these tools in the shapes like it would just be easier if we had a triangle tool right off the bat i think it's just annoying to have to use the polygon tool for everything but as we'll see in a minute when it comes to building shapes adobe illustrator has the better tool because they have the shape builder tool but we'll get there in a second okay let's go down here this is the paint brush tool when you draw with the paint brush you get a line over here in affinity we have the vector brush tool and it does the same thing and of course these then become vector lines that you can work with when you have your node you can come in and you can adjust them so that differs from a raster brush which affinity has raster brushes as well because in those you can't of course come in and adjust the line however you want okay inside of the paintbrush tool we have another brush tool called the blob brush tool i'm going to go ahead and make my brush bigger with my bracket key the way to think about the blob brush tool is that the blob brush tool paints in fills not in strokes and so when we come here if we grab our direct selection tool we will actually see that this is a fill right and we can go ahead and adjust it like a fill rather than a stroke there's nothing like the blob brush tool in affinity designer that i've ever seen i don't know of a workaround to make something like this happen well that's not like the worst thing in the world you can draw anything with the pen tool i think the blob brush tool would be a nice addition for some designers it's not something that i rely on but i think there are designers who would really like to have that be brought into a fitting designer okay so that's the blob brush tool let's go down to the shaper tool now now the shaper tool is interesting in that you basically just draw something and then it tries to make a shape out of it so this is a lot like quick shapes and a lot of ipad programs so you can draw out different objects and then get it i feel like the idea here was that this would be great for a touch interface but i'm not even sure if it came into illustrator on the ipad so it's kind of an interesting tool but i don't really see it as being necessary especially not with the amount of shapes that are available to you in a fitting designer but there isn't anything like the shaper tool and a fitting designer and then there's a bunch of other tools here that are also not infinity designer except for the pencil tool so the pencil tool allows you to freehand i know my artboards are getting very messy here but you get the idea so it allows you to free hand draw a line and that's very different than the way the pen tool works because you aren't dropping points and adjusting them you're just freehanding the line and then illustrator is putting the points along and there's a pencil tool in a frame designer as well which does essentially the same thing you draw a line out then as i said the other tools here the smooth tool the path eraser tool and the join tool those don't exist as tools in a fine designer let's keep going i don't want this video to be too long so i'm trying to keep moving fairly quickly here when we come to the eraser tool you need to have an object selected so you just select this object and then with the eraser tool you can go in and you can erase part of it you can break up shapes this way and this can lead to a very kind of organic look and there is no eraser tool or equivalent in a fine designer there is an eraser tool found in the pixel persona of course but that's for erasing pixels it will not create a vector shape for you you can see when i try and do that the assistant says i need to add in a raster layer for you and so it's just not going to work that way at all so those are not the equivalent and this is true of all the tools found in the eraser fly out here the scissor tool and the knife tool is not duplicated in a fiend designer affinity seems pretty intent on you just using shapes in the pen tool to create whatever you're looking for so they don't provide as many options for you so the eraser tool will actually create new paths it can be quite useful not something that i rely on but something i think a lot of designers do use the scissor tool on the other hand allows you to break paths at a specific point so you come in here zoom in and then because you've broken that there with the scissor tool it's cut there's actually an opening in that path you can't do that of course with a scissor tool over here in affinity designer but you can come in and you can choose a particular point and then you can break it using the action so you can choose to break the curve there and then you can see here we have a similar effect it's not that these things can't be done it's just that they can't be done in the same way and you can do things like the eraser tool one of which would be to use the pencil tool go here expand the stroke to make it an object then use your geometry to divide it that's going to get you a little bit closer but then of course you have to come in and delete these things it just is not producing the same effect you can get similar results it can be done but it's not going to be exactly the same so let's keep rolling along here the knife tool also does not exist the knife tool it's useful for cutting off part but not leaving a gap in there okay let's move on to another group that's kind of interesting here and again this is all playing back into that philosophy idea right is that illustrator is trying to give you as many tools as possible to do things as many ways as possible and fiend designer is giving you a more limited set of tools easier to learn probably but without quite as much customization and this is what we see here so we have a rotate and reflect tool there is no version of these transform tools so below these we also have the scale tool the shear tool and the reshape tool there's no version of these tools over in a fine designer but of course this can all be done by the transform panel over here but you can make transformations as well as rotate and scale and in the top we have the flip options so you can flip those in any way you want to and then the 90 degrees rotate and then the other thing that we do have that plays into these same things in a fan designer is this point transform tool the point transform tool is interesting in that it lets you move the point where you want to transform from so you can move that point around wherever you want to be making your transformation from and then you can make your transformations and that it becomes your reference point so that's similar to what you can do when you use the rotate tool in illustrator one thing in illustrator you always have to remember to do is to select your object before you go to the tool you want to use so let me go to the rotate tool and we can actually move our center rotation around and that will change where we rotate from okay so those are similar features but they're not exactly the same tool right and one thing that you can really customize in adobe illustrator is when you double click on the tool you get the dialog box and you can do things here that you can't just do with the tool itself and that's something that doesn't exist over in a feeding designer so you can see you can kind of set things up and you can choose to make a copy of it there are some different things that you can do there so these tools they don't exist as tools but you can still get their same effect in affinity designer the reshape tool it's kind of the last one here and that will just allow you to reshape on paths and you can do that with the node tool in affinity designer so i don't feel like it's really missing anything there i'm not really sure why the reshape tool even exists but if you know please drop in the comments and tell me how you use the reshape tool in your design workflow okay then we get to the width tool the warp tool the twirl tool the pucker tool the bloat tool the scallop tool the crystallized tool the wrinkle tool these are all ways to kind of adjust the way your shape is i really think the width tool is probably the most useful of these and you can come along and you can actually make the width bigger or smaller and you can add in different points along the width to give it different effects in a few designer that doesn't exist but the contour tool is a new tool here it'll let you make kind of these adjustments along the path but it's not really like the width tool at all and this is one of the things when we were looking at amadine last week amadine had a width tool which i was impressed by and affinity still doesn't really have a width tool this contour tool is interesting i don't see myself using it a lot but do some interesting things with it but it really isn't like the width tool but it can do some of these kind of expanding effects i guess so there are a lot of tools that fall into this category in illustrator and none of them are really duplicated over in a fan designer all right moving on we then have the free transform tool and the puppet warp tool not 100 sure why these are grouped together but the free transform tool basically just lets you make transformations freely like you would expect and it's not that different than what you can do with say like the move tool and the node tool together so that is not duplicating free designer i think that's just one of those things where they were like we don't really need to do that we have the transform panel we have the move tool we have the node tool we don't need another tool to do that now the puppet warp tool is interesting not something again that i need to use but if you need it then it's really cool to have it'll place points in your corners and then you can place points around where you want to be able to manipulate your shape and it's just kind of an interesting like free-flowing way to be able to do your manipulations and if you say like make a character then you can actually give them joints and you can move them into different poses and that's why it's called the puppet warp tool there's nothing like that in fleet designer puppet warp tool doesn't exist and there's nothing that i've ever seen that looks equivalent to it if that's something that you love to use then adobe illustrator is probably the way to go for you and then we come to one of our favorites let me just grab these two shapes here and i'll show you how the shape builder tool works the shape builder tool is one that you know we've said it would be nice if something like this would come to a fan designer you select two shapes using your selection tool and then using your shape builder tool you can choose to erase parts of them or keep parts of them so if i hold down option i can erase and i can get kind of different effects there now of course in effing designer we've talked about this before that tool doesn't exist and it's not per se necessary just grab a triangle here because you can of course use the geometry to do it but that's not a tool right the geometry is a menu item and it's not a tool and we're primarily looking at tools here and looking at what works but just so you can see we can subtract different objects and get a very similar effect move that one on top so you can get a very similar effect but not with a tool it's not nearly as easy to do but once you get the hang of it it's not that hard either okay the live paint bucket tool and the live paint selection tool there are no live paint tools inside of a fitting designer it's not something that i've ever really relied on or needed in a lot of my work but it might be something that's important to you those live tools are really tend to be useful when you're bringing in a lot of your like scans and stuff and then you want to vectorize that and color it the perspective grid tool does not exist inside of a filling designer there's nothing like the perspective grid tool or the perspective selection tool all right then you have a mesh warp tool mesh warp tool is something that a lot of people like to use so you can come in here you can use the mesh warp tool and you can make a mesh which then allows you to warp things in a lot of ways this isn't as useful as it used to be now that we have the puppet warp tool and we also have the freeform gradient so we don't i think need this as much as we used to in adobe illustrator but this doesn't exist in a phone designer and those other tools that we've kind of used in place of it the puppet warp and the mesh gradient those also don't exist in infinity designer so there's another thing it's kind of a specialized tool not everybody needs it but can be useful okay then we have the gradient tool and now finally we're back into a place where we actually have an equivalent in a feeding designer the gradient tool is used for just ingredients these work differently that's for sure they're going for the same thing but if i grab the gradient tool which is called the fill tool in affinity designer i can actually go ahead and i can select an object drag across it and make a gradient in adobe illustrator i have to select the object first so i can select the object and when i choose gradient nothing happens because my fill is not a gradient i have to first then go change my fill to a gradient swatch and then i can start to control it but the gradient tool in a feeding designer is just way way easier to use it's much easier much more intuitive that you can just move the pieces around you can make it without having a selection first i just find it much easier to use but you can't do a freeform gradient like you can in adobe illustrator so if i go to adobe illustrator choose freeform gradient then i can add in these different colors here to make my freeform gradient and you can get some really nice effects doing that that look just isn't possible over in faint designer all right then we have the eyedropper tool which allows you to of course pick up and drop colors and while in affinity designer we do have something that's called the color picker tool which looks like an eyedropper it is not nearly so robust as the eyedropper tool in adobe illustrator so the eyedropper tool in adobe illustrator if you double click it you can see let me drag this over here you get all of these different options for what you can pick up in a few designer it's just color it's called the color picker tool and that's really what it is so it's just not nearly as robust in a fiend designer or at least i haven't found a way for it to be if you know of something i don't know go ahead and drop in the comments and let me know that all right we'll click cancel here so again the tools look the same but they don't function exactly the same then there's the measure tool there's nothing like the measure tool in a fiend designer i've never really used this tool but i'm sure there are people who do basically you can just measure things and find out what size they are so it's kind of a cool thing to have not something that i've really needed but depending on what kind of work you're doing and what kind of precision you need you might like that all right the blend tool go ahead and make two shapes just so we can see the blend tool here blend tool allows you to blend two shapes together and if you double click on it you can choose the method how many steps it takes what distance it takes there's a bunch of different things that you can do and it will just blend those shapes and some people find that this is very very useful for their workflow some people don't but there is nothing like it over a few designer so that's one of those tools that adobe illustrator has developed over time and a fan designer just doesn't have it the symbol sprayer i'm not going to go into everything about the symbol sprayer because it can get kind of complicated but there are a lot of different symbol tools here and there are no symbol tools per se in a fan designer a symbol is something that can be reused over and over again to use symbols infinity designer you actually have to open up a different studio which is called the symbol studio and so you can store and use symbols but it's not nearly as robust as in illustrator where you have all these different tools to work with i don't know that that's necessary it probably depends on your workflow and what you're doing but again not over in a fan designer okay let's look here then then we have the graphing tool the graphing tool is one that if you work in infographics a lot you probably know the graphing tool pretty well it's something that i've used quite a bit in illustrator and it does not exist in a fiend designer and i really wish that it did because i think it would make making infographics and fitting designer a lot easier to have a graphing tool that being said illustrator has not updated the graphing tool in a long long time and so it still looks pretty archaic it doesn't work super super well once you know it you can kind of work your way around it but you can also build your own graphs inside of a fleeing designer you just have to pay really close attention to the math to make sure that you don't misrepresent things so a lot of times what i'll do is i'll build a graph in excel to make sure it's right i'll bring it in and then i'll trace over it just using the shapes infinite designer to make an accurate graph okay next we have the artboard tool so the artboard tool allows you to draw new artboards also allows you to of course select artboards and duplicate them and over here in effing designer we also have the artboard tool so essentially the same thing over here so we have an artboard tool and then the slice tool so the slice tool we also saw in photoshop slice allows you to export multiple objects at a time and so you have slice tool slice selection tool both of those tools are in the slice tool in fane designer so you go over here to the export persona and you find the slice tool and it will let you select or make new slices we're almost to the end here we have the hand tool which will allow you to move around and of course you can get that any time just by holding down the space bar and over here in a few designer we have the view tool which will allow you to move around similarly you can hold down spacebar zoom tool you can zoom in and out this zoom tool you can zoom in and out now i never use the zoom tool or the hand tool per se i always just use keyboard shortcuts to handle all of those functions which i'm guessing you probably do too so i don't really see them as being completely necessary but both have them if you need them okay so now we've gone through all of these different tools here and i just want to highlight a few tools that exist in fitting designer that don't exist in adobe illustrator but of course there are ways to get around them and do the equivalent things so we already kind of talked about the point transform tool then there's the corner tool so let me draw out a shape with corners here then you grab your corner tool you can go in and you can select specific corners and adjust them one at a time here and illustrator added in something very similar when they added in live corners so it's a very similar feature there just happens to be a specific tool for an infinite designer which this is interesting when a fiend designer actually has a tool that's specific and illustrator doesn't because illustrator has so many more specific tools another one is this transparency tool so this is like the gradient tool except it's for transparency of the whole object so you can see you can come in here and you can adjust the transparency and just like the gradient tool you can actually add in different stops to make different transparencies now you could achieve something very similar using gradients in illustrator they just don't have a tool like this and then there's the place image tool illustrator has the option to place images you just have to do it through the file menu there isn't a tool for it that doesn't really make a difference either way but there is a tool here just in case you were wondering what's on the toolbar and then there's the vector crop tool so the vector crop tool allows you to crop vectors non-destructively of course so you can always get back it's similar to making a mask it's not like you couldn't do a similar effect using clipping mask in illustrator it just happens to be a tool for it which i actually do find that useful periodically i didn't think i would but i do find myself using it from time to time especially when i'm just trying to quickly mask things out and then as we mentioned before the cat tool and all of these different shape tools are not found in adobe illustrator so that can make things a little bit easier for you especially i guess if you need to draw a cat i don't know why you would but you might and then the last thing to say is just the pixel persona has a lot of tools these are photoshop and affinity photo equivalent tools for working with pixels and that just shows a difference in approach in the two programs right illustrator doesn't really concern itself with pixel tools or bitmap images at all a theme designer essentially will let you do most of the editing right here from a feeding designer and that's just one of the things that affinity does better than illustrator does is allowing you to cross between different types of design or different types of art within a single program so if you need to be able to work on a lot of pixel perfect things then a fiend designer really shines there because it just has so many tools you can see these are a lot of the tools that we talked about when we looked at the photo programs so you've got things like the flood fill and the burn and dodge and smudge there's just a bunch of different tools here that you can use now obviously this is not everything from photo or photoshop it is definitely trimmed down but there are a lot of tools that can be useful for you if you're trying to work with it and i do find that very helpful of course i do a lot of my work inside of any publisher now just so i have access to all of the tools of a thing photo and a filling designer and a fan publisher mostly all in just one spot there with a fanny publisher okay and that will basically wrap this up again i think what we highlight here is just how many more tools there are in adobe illustrator which can be really great but also does require a higher learning curve and just a lot more things to know about where you can achieve most of the same not all but most of the same things infinity designer with less tools and maybe in a way that would be more straightforward especially if you are just starting out if you've kind of grown up in illustrator you know where the tools are that you like to use and you just ignore the others then you probably feel very comfortable there in illustrator but you're just kind of two different approaches to the same type of work here okay so now that we've looked at every tool in effing designer and adobe illustrator i hope that you have a better feel for how these programs compare and again it's not strictly an apples to apples comparison here because there are a lot of things that exist in one that don't exist in the other and you need to decide what works best for you we've compared the desktop versions of each of these programs but they're also ipad versions of each of these programs so if you'd like me to compare those go ahead and drop a comment letting me know that as well if you're interested in learning more about a fitting designer i have a number of courses available on skillshare that i've linked in the description of this video that can help you to learn more about how to use this program i would love to hear from you in the comments about which program you're going to use and which tools you think are critical that help you make that determination remember to go ahead and subscribe for more videos like this one and to follow me on instagram at ben designs media for weekly design lessons we'll chat in the comments and i will see you in the next video [Music] [Music] you
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Channel: ben designs
Views: 13,691
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Affinity, Adobe, Illustrator, Designer, vs
Id: zFwVceOb-dQ
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Length: 33min 1sec (1981 seconds)
Published: Sat Mar 13 2021
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