Originally posted by gnarlin
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Inkscape 1.4 Brings Numerous Enhancements To This Vector Graphics Editor
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Last edited by Hans Bull; 17 October 2024, 02:39 AM.
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Originally posted by mxan View Post
Inkscape doesn't really support CMYK, that's already one major reason it can't be used professionally.
Inkscape was designed as an SVG editor so it never really needed CMYK - it was meant for web graphics, not print.
Illustrator on the other hand has always been about print, being built on PostScript.
Illustrator's only real competitor in the commercial space was FreeHand, which Adobe killed off when they bought it through their acquisition of Macromedia.
There's also CorelDRAW but I don't know anyone who uses it.
It's maybe personal but I genuinely gave Inkscape multiple tries but in the end the UX is just too messy, and essentially the same can be said about parts of the GUI in general as well.
I do however appreciate the CLI scripting interface. Extremely valuable for proper batch processing for me.
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Originally posted by Daktyl198 View PostInteresting. I wonder why Inkscape has never added additional color model support? AFAIK it's not horrendously difficult and there's a lot of libraries out there to help with it.
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Originally posted by mxan View Post
Inkscape doesn't really support CMYK, that's already one major reason it can't be used professionally.
Inkscape was designed as an SVG editor so it never really needed CMYK - it was meant for web graphics, not print.
Illustrator on the other hand has always been about print, being built on PostScript.
Illustrator's only real competitor in the commercial space was FreeHand, which Adobe killed off when they bought it through their acquisition of Macromedia.
There's also CorelDRAW but I don't know anyone who uses it.
Leave a comment:
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Originally posted by mxan View Post
Inkscape doesn't really support CMYK, that's already one major reason it can't be used professionally.
Inkscape was designed as an SVG editor so it never really needed CMYK - it was meant for web graphics, not print.
Illustrator on the other hand has always been about print, being built on PostScript.
Illustrator's only real competitor in the commercial space was FreeHand, which Adobe killed off when they bought it through their acquisition of Macromedia.
There's also CorelDRAW but I don't know anyone who uses it.
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Originally posted by rene View Post
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Originally posted by mxan View Post
Inkscape doesn't really support CMYK, that's already one major reason it can't be used professionally.
Inkscape was designed as an SVG editor so it never really needed CMYK - it was meant for web graphics, not print.
Illustrator on the other hand has always been about print, being built on PostScript.
Illustrator's only real competitor in the commercial space was FreeHand, which Adobe killed off when they bought it through their acquisition of Macromedia.
There's also CorelDRAW but I don't know anyone who uses it.
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Still needs gradients to use more color spaces than just sRGB. Interpolation over cubic representations just sucks.
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