Why do people recommend Corel Draw over Adobe Illustrator? I've done some basic Illustrator, however many friends tell me I should focus on Corel Draw... Why is that? Is it a fad? Is it easier? Or can it do more stuff?
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Corel Draw over Adobe Illustrator
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Corel Draw over Adobe Illustrator
Last edited by arianeax on Sat Aug 24, 2013 6:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Corel Draw over Adobe Illustrator
well, for the hundredth time.......
from what I remember, in AI you have to switch between 3 or 4 different node tools to work on nodes, and of course they went SASS (software as a subscription service), and they have always piled several disparate programs together, like flash and illustrator and catalyst, and builder, dreamweaver, etc, etc, etc,,,, which is all more suited for content/media/web developers
for me, corel is way faster and easier (and cheaper) when it comes to drawing and editing for simple 2D cutting
yet, neither is geared toward cnc enough to even have dxf with arcs, on that note AI with the exdxf plugin blows corel draw and dxf tools out of the water, not sure exdxf is still available for AI since CS6 though
for me, I like corel and v-carve pro (to make dxf with arcs), which is awesome for cnc routers, add sheetcam for plasma cutting, and you've got it made in the shade
another thing I like about corel is the VBA macros and how the workspace customization works, adobe has actionscript and an interface that is less customizable, almost the same interface in photoshop as in AI, great for a team of web developers to build websites in dreamweaver with flash and video, too much for an individual just trying to do 2D vector art
from what I remember, in AI you have to switch between 3 or 4 different node tools to work on nodes, and of course they went SASS (software as a subscription service), and they have always piled several disparate programs together, like flash and illustrator and catalyst, and builder, dreamweaver, etc, etc, etc,,,, which is all more suited for content/media/web developers
for me, corel is way faster and easier (and cheaper) when it comes to drawing and editing for simple 2D cutting
yet, neither is geared toward cnc enough to even have dxf with arcs, on that note AI with the exdxf plugin blows corel draw and dxf tools out of the water, not sure exdxf is still available for AI since CS6 though
for me, I like corel and v-carve pro (to make dxf with arcs), which is awesome for cnc routers, add sheetcam for plasma cutting, and you've got it made in the shade
another thing I like about corel is the VBA macros and how the workspace customization works, adobe has actionscript and an interface that is less customizable, almost the same interface in photoshop as in AI, great for a team of web developers to build websites in dreamweaver with flash and video, too much for an individual just trying to do 2D vector art