![]() ![]() I see that opportunity diminish whenever I see a feature implemented in a mere "me, too" fashion, as is arrowheads. That is what I see as the core of potential advantages over Illustrator: The fact that it is a decades-old stack of newer features merely "bundled with" a bunch of outdated basic features. It would be a true game-changer even for long-time AI users who have never really discovered the kind of brush-based applications I'm talking about, just because Adobe's treatment is too "standalone" as opposed to being truly integrated with its own preexisting features of the program. I am convinced that a truly innovative implementation of what I call path stokes and path ends that could be combined into user-defined path styles could yield both a much more powerful "arrowheads" feature and a vector-brush feature more powerful, versatile, intuitive, and elegant than Adobe's treatment. ![]() This is also why I am so very disappointed in the merely "me, too" treatment of arrowheads. That doesn't suggest that what you (and I) would call "real" vector brushes are on the unpublished road map. Hopefully, that's what the eventual goal is (perhaps after sorting out the problems associated with the present sub-par expanded stroke results).īut it is disconcerting that the current brushes are called "vector" brushes. As always, Illustrator's implementation could be easily exceeded in power and versatility, and that's what I want to see in Affinity Designer. Hear hear! It's been demonstrated that a lot of nice things can be done with the brushes in Designer, but calling them "vector" brushes just because the raster images they contain follow a spline path, is entirely misleading.Īctual vector brushes (in which the brush's base artwork is vector paths) enable you to do an entire world of more powerful things:įor example, A single "Pattern Brush" in AI can be built to enable creation of a mechanically correct hex bolt of any length and diameter. ![]()
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