Alternatives to Adobe

I've been using Photoshop since AD 2000. Flash paid for the unhealthy amounts of ramen obwarzanki I ingested during my high school and uni. Still, since I ditched all Adobe software last year, I haven't looked back for a second.

That is because:

  1. Adobe are a terrible company.
  2. The alternatives (including free, even OSS tools) are quite good!

Here's the list of Adobe alternatives I'm using regularly. I'll split it on a per-use-case basis. If you have questions, message me and I'll update this note.

Use cases:

UX/Wireframes/Prototypes

Edit for 2024: the Figma acquisition by Adobe fell through (yay). I still recommend checking out Penpot.

Figma → PenPot (still experimenting)

👍

👎

Photo development

Lightroom Classic → Capture One

👍

👎

Tip: wait till late December and look for discounts. I saved 50% on CO this way.

Image processing

Example: quick edits to non RAW files, finishing touches on my Procreate sketches

Photoshop → Affinity Photo

👍

👎

Automation

Example: batch image processing (conversion, cropping, video → gif)

Photoshop → Affinity Photo

Photoshop → ffmpeg

👍 👎
I wish there was a nicer, contextual UI for ffmpeg. I used ffmpeg professionally (realtime video processing pipelines) and I still ask GPT to generate ffmpeg parameters.

Diagramming/Vector sketches

Illustrator (yes) and pen and paper → Concepts

👍

👎

Audio Editing

Audition → Audacity

👍

👎

Vector editing

Illustrator → Affinity Designer or Inkscape

(to be researched)

Video editing

Premiere → DaVinci Resolve

👍

👎

"Tiny cinema"

DTP

InDesign/Illustrator → ...

I'll have an excuse to try out some DTP tools soon. I met a (successful, talented) designer recently who managed to design her book in Figma, so I'm expecting to be surprised.

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a giant foot-shaped snail with a house on its back. the house is still in construction, with a big crane towering above it The image is a stylized black-and-white illustration. In the lower left corner, there is a small, cozy-looking house with smoke rising from its chimney. The smoke, however, does not dissipate into the air but instead forms a dark, looming cloud. Within the cloud, the silhouette of a large, menacing face is visible, with its eyes and nose peeking through the darkness. The creature, perhaps a cat, appears to be watching over the house ominously, creating a sense of foreboding or unease.