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Illustrator vs. Gimp

dirttoo

New Member
I have a guy wanting to work for me and he designs with illustrator. I don't have Illustrator, I mostly use Flexi. I do have Gimp but have never tried it. I was told they were real similar. Would it be good to practice with Gimp until I could get Illustrator? Are they that similar? What is the minimum Illustrator I could use? I have Photoshop CS5 so I don't need some big packge.
 

rjssigns

Active Member
GIMP is an open source Photoshop type program. As far as what Ai you can get away with my wife has CS on her system and rips around just fine.
 

SignBurst PCs

New Member
Turn him loose in flexi. It has a lot of illy-like qualities. He wants to work for YOU. He needs to learn the tools of your shop.

^ This is a good idea. ^ I am a fan of Adobe products, but if you are a Flexi shop, teaching him to use Flexi may be more productive.
 

ExecuPrintGS

New Member
I actually learned Flexi before getting into AI. Flexi has a lot of tools that i still use today.
Im sure he will be fine in flexi but to me gimp =/= ai gimp is more photoshop than ai
 

CreatedDesigns

New Member
I say spend the 450-500 on CS6 design suite and let him get started. They may be more productive right off the bat and make you money than costing money to train on new software.
 

TyrantDesigner

Art! Hot and fresh.
I say if he's worth hiring, get him Illustrator.

Or better yet, both of you switch over to CorelDraw. ;)

I love this idea.

But really ... anyone not willing to learn the software you prefer in your shop isn't worth the investment since if they leave ... you then need to work with all those files you don't normally use.

Getting the software your guy prefers is nice ... just make sure he takes those files and moves them to what YOU prefer when the job is done and that he know how to use flexi without the aid of illustrator.
 
C

ColoPrinthead

Guest
I say spend the 450-500 on CS6 design suite and let him get started. They may be more productive right off the bat and make you money than costing money to train on new software.
Sounds like someone is using the "student" version in their shop :cool:
 

shoresigns

New Member
I have a guy wanting to work for me and he designs with illustrator. I don't have Illustrator, I mostly use Flexi. I do have Gimp but have never tried it. I was told they were real similar. Would it be good to practice with Gimp until I could get Illustrator? Are they that similar? What is the minimum Illustrator I could use? I have Photoshop CS5 so I don't need some big packge.

Pro tip: pros use Illustrator. It's the de facto standard because it's powerful and efficient. Flexi may suffice if you're a small shop that doesn't do much design/layouts or if you mainly do cut vinyl.
 

hansman

New Member
^^^Agree with Shoresigns above^^^
It boggles the mind how you can run a sign shop without the proper tools:
Photoshop = Raster
Illustrator = Vector
 

skyhigh

New Member
Pro tip: pros use Illustrator. It's the de facto standard because it's powerful and efficient. Flexi may suffice if you're a small shop that doesn't do much design/layouts or if you mainly do cut vinyl.

Who's the "pro" you are referring to? Your view on Flexi is pretty far off base. I'll assume you don't have flexi, or you haven't been able to figure out all the features.
 

royster13

New Member
Who's the "pro" you are referring to? Your view on Flexi is pretty far off base. I'll assume you don't have flexi, or you haven't been able to figure out all the features.
Or they have Flexi Starter that came with their 200.00 US Cutter......
 

bikecomedy

New Member
I knew I was using the wrong word but it was all I had.. Thanks..analogous it is... But nice to know that PMS specification is not available in Inkscape. Thanks!
 
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