Big Rice Field said:
All I can say is that in my experience nine out of ten sign companies prefer Corel over Adobe.
Obviously that's an anecdotal claim, not scientific at all. CorelDRAW has a long history in sign shops, but "preference" has absolutely nothing to do with it. The real truth is that the vast majority of sign shops have always used DOS and Windows-based computers. CorelDRAW was just about the only choice sign shops had for a mainstream draw-type program. In the early 1990's Adobe was putting most of its resources for Illustrator into the Mac version. With little competition CorelDRAW was able to build a pretty big lead.
It took the rise of large format digital printing in the 2000's for Adobe's software to start getting adopted in sign shops. Over the past 10-15 years Adobe has been chipping away at Corel's lead in sign shops. Adobe's software already heavily dominates many other niches in the graphic design industry.
Big Rice Field said:
As for the subscription marketing method, it is less expensive in the long run compared to the upgrade method which cost three times as much in the past releases.
That is completely incorrect. The subscription version of CorelDRAW was $198 per year, but is now $249. The cheapest way one was able to buy and maintain a CorelDRAW license was having a full version already, then paying the nearly $300 up front hit to the wallet to lock in a $99 per year "upgrade protection" rate. That deal is no longer available. Any existing CorelDRAW users had a deadline to get into the program. That deadline has passed.
Now, it's worth repeating the price of CorelDRAW was effectively doubled over time when the application went to a yearly upgrade schedule rather than a 2 year cycle. Users were paying $150 to $200 once every two years to keep a CorelDRAW license current. The cost doubled to $200 every year. Now, with the subscription setup that price is even higher, working out to $500 every 2 years.
Big Rice Field said:
As a dedicated Corel user (since version 4 in 1994) I will stick with it. Faster than Adobe. It works better with shop manufacturing equipment like routers and bending machines.
That's nonsense. My shop has a routing table and a channel letter return notching/bending machine. We used Arete software in conjunction with our routing table prior to getting the notching/bending machine.
None of that stuff takes CDR files. The applications that feed artwork data into those machines typically import EPS files.
As for the claim that CorelDRAW is "better" and "faster," that comparison really depends on specific tasks and application functions. I've been using CorelDRAW since its first version. I've also been using Adobe Illustrator since version 4. I'm no fanboy of either application. There are some things CorelDRAW does do better than Adobe Illustrator. But then there are things Illustrator does a lot better than Corel.
I deal with a lot of corporate branding assets and much of that stuff is generated by Adobe Illustrator. CorelDRAW does not have a 100% overlap of Illustrator's features. CorelDRAW can be highly suspect at importing Illustrator files as well as EPS and PDF files made in Illustrator. I don't like how CorelDRAW handles gradients and transparency. While I generate a lot of sign designs and client sketches in CorelDRAW, I do use Illustrator (and Photoshop) to fine tune designs prior to them being output by large format printers. Plus there's certain effects and features Illustrator has that CorelDRAW doesn't. Add to that the highly impressive suite of Illustrator plug-ins made by Astute Graphics.
WildWestDesigns said:
I've been hearing good things with Affinity Designer and it is cheaper, plus, I think like Adobe, they are offering Designer for free for 2 or 3 months.
Currently Serif is cutting its prices in half. The Windows and OSX versions of Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher cost $24.99 each. The iPad versions of Affinity Designer and Photo are $9.99.
WildWestDesigns said:
If 2020 version has the same response that 2019 has, could be some shift there. Be interesting if Bobby has had a chance to play around with 2020 since he got it. How the OTF support is on it and the like.
CorelDRAW 2020 basically feels like a bug fix for CorelDRAW 2019. But some bugs still remain. There's lots of details about it at Corel's own community forums. Really the biggest new feature in the 2020 version is the addition of OpenType Variable Font support. This is one of those features where CorelDRAW is definitely NOT faster than Illustrator. The axis slider performance, rendering a variable font object as you move the slider, is TERRIBLE. The object disappears as you move the slider. You pretty much have to type a number into the value box and hit enter. Illustrator's handling of variable font objects on the very same computer is far superior. You're able to see the font object dynamically change as you move any axis slider, be it weight, width, slant or some other axis built into that specific variable font.
The thing that really has a lot of Corel users disappointed in the variable fonts feature is CDR 2020 included no variable fonts.
Adobe Illustrator has several variable fonts built-in (along with some SVG Color fonts too). The Google Fonts site has several variable fonts available there. But each one of those has only one single variable axis: light to bold. None of them have a width axis slider. A variable font with a width axis would be very useful for sign designers. That leaves CorelDRAW users with only one variable font with a width slider, Bahnschrift, the one variable font included in Windows 10. If they want other variable fonts with a width axis
they have to go buy them. Variable fonts can be pretty expensive. Basically you're buying a super family of fonts that's built into just one font file.
I think Corel has some tough days ahead of it. The first thing they have to do is
clean up the bugs. They've gotta get both Mac and Windows versions completely stabilized and improve the application performance. Version 2020 does run a little better than CDR 2019, but there is still a lot of work to do. And then they're really going to have to take a hard look at their pricing. The price of the subscription only version jumped by $51 to $249 per year. I really can't see how Corel can expect to attract new users at that price point. The only alternative is the buy once for $499 option with no upgrades following that. I'll bet they end up having to back-track those pricing models and upgrade policies.