A short message to all Graphic Tracer "naysayers".
"Old dogs can learn new tricks!" I am approaching my 72nd birthday, and have been working with computer graphics for close to 40 years. I have been in the sign business for 35 years, and have owned my own shop since early 90's. At one time or another, I have used various versions of most of the popular programs in the industry, and have spent a lot of money on things that really didn't work very well... including employees. Bottom line, software is like an employee... it has to make or save you more time and money than it cost to stay on the payroll. It must be worth the investment. In my humble opinion, there is no other program that I know of that compares to Graphic Tracer in what it does.
With that said, every program has it's limitations. That is why I typically carry more than one tool in my toolbox.
Here are a few questions for each of you...
1. What is your program of choice for cleaning up graphics?
2. Do you clean up graphics in house, outsource it and pay somebody else to fix it, send the customer away and tell them to come back when they have better art, or just run with the art the customer gave you?
3. How much time per month do you spend fixing poor quality art or trying to identify a particular font?
4. Does cleaning up poor quality customer art ultimately cost you money or make you money?
5. How much time would need to be saved or production increase per month would have to occur in your shop to be worth a $10/month investment?
Graphic Tracer was developed as a cleanup utility, to enhance the capabilities of other design programs. It was independently reviewed and won a best product award at SGIA/Printing United.
"The program that works the best is the one that you know" is generally a true statement. However, a person with a basic understanding in how to use Graphic Tracer can frequently "blow the socks off" of a "seasoned" illustrator or CorelDraw pro in cleaning up many images. If you don't believe me?
Contact me and we will set up a live demonstration. See for yourself how easy it is to use, and how much time can actually be saved.
Yes, Old dogs can learn new tricks!