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Who needs Adobe?

Stefanos Karagos | December 14, 2006

Magazine's and book's publishers Desktop Publishing Departments around the globe, are full of Adobe's super products like Photoshop [for photo processing] , Illustrator [for vector graphics] and Indesign [for design layouts].

Looking at "the other side of the coin", I knew the existence of Photoshop's alternative, the well known image manipulation program Gimp, but I never had look if there were any Open Source applications for vector or layout design.

Searching further for free alternatives I found two real gems:
1. Inskape, that is an open source vector graphics editor, with capabilities similar to Illustrator, Freehand, CorelDraw, or Xara X using the W3C standard Scalable Vector Graphics (.SVG) file format.
Supported SVG features include shapes, paths, text, markers, clones, alpha blending, transforms, gradients, patterns, and grouping.
Inkscape also supports Creative Commons meta-data, node editing, layers, complex path operations, bitmap tracing, text-on-path, flowed text, direct XML editing, and more. It imports formats such as JPEG, PNG, TIFF, and others and exports PNG as well as multiple vector-based formats.

and
2. Scribus, that is a cross-platform open source page layout program with the aim of producing commercial grade output in PDF and Postscript. Originally developed on Linux, Scribus also runs natively on MacOSX and Windows 2000 and XP.
While the goals of the program are to make professional page layout accessible for beginners without limiting support for professional publishing features such as: spot color support, CMYK color, high grade PDF creation, Encapsulated Postscript import/export and creation of color separations.
Scribus was a really surprise for me because all these years I was not imagine that could be a so professional open source layout application.

Well, it's amazing what you really can do with the above Open Source applications!
And this is a prove that if you want to use Open Source software for real professional results, in a strong demanding environment, you CAN DO IT!


And if you are looking for some great free photo processing tools you can take a look at Mediachance's free tools. They will surprise you! [I know these are not Open Source ;-)]

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Comments

George Moschovitis (not verified)

December 14, 2006 - 19:43   »

FYI, Xara is now open source too, and competes directly with Inkscape. The nice thing about inkscape are the frequent releases (each one featuring cool new stuff). Another great open source project is blender3d an open source replacement for 3d Studio MAX. Now, this is an impressive application. Check it out!

Stefanos Karagos

December 14, 2006 - 21:58   »

You are right George! Blender3D is an amazing application.

Brian White (not verified)

December 14, 2006 - 19:51   »

Thanks for the pointers to the other free software. I've been using Gimp for years and only started using Photoshop recently when I wanted 16-bit editing. (Here's what I wrote about Photoshop vs Gimp.)

Stefanos Karagos

December 14, 2006 - 21:56   »

Unfortunately Gimp will not support 16 or 32bit editing before version 3.0 hit the masses...
Your post about Photoshop and Gimp is very detailed and to the point!

Curupira (not verified)

December 15, 2006 - 03:41   »

There is another open source photo-editing tool (IMHO, better than The Gimp): Krita.

http://www.koffice.org/krita/

Oh, and it supports CMYK ;)

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