Introducing
The Slant team built an AI & it’s awesome
Find the best product instantly
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now
4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to BeFunky Photo Editor ?
Ad
Ad
Google Fonts
All
9
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
2
Top
Pro
Open source and free
See More
Top
Con
Stale font versions
See More
Top
Pro
Live preview
You can live preview fonts in multiple ways - you can view a single word, a sentence or a paragraph with text and font-size of your choice. There's also a poster view that tries putting more fonts on screen at a time by showing only their name without the option of entering your own text, and is the only view option that allows inverting background and text colors.
See More
Top
Con
Mainly focused on latin family
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to filter through fonts
Within categories such as serif, sans serif, monospace, etc, you can adjust desired thickness, slant, width and script to filter the collection of fonts. Additionally, you can also set how you wish to order the fonts (by popularity, alphabet, date added, etc).
See More
Top
Pro
Sizable collection of fonts
There are more than 600 fonts to choose from.
See More
Top
Pro
In-depth font comparison
Once you've added at least two fonts to your collection you can compare them closely by overlapping them in the compare view. Simply click the review tab at the bottom and navigate to compare tab at the top.
See More
Top
Pro
Great for web designers
This repository was designed specifically for web designers. As such it shows the impact of the font choice on page load time, allows selecting only the font styles and sets you need to reduce overhead, and gives multiple methods of integrating the fonts into your website.
See More
Top
Pro
Integrates with Typecast
With fonts you wish to use selected, go to review tab at the bottom and click 'Try in Typecast' at the top. Typecast has an easy to use WYSIWYG editor that allows quickly prototyping and testing out chosen fonts.
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
16
0
OpenToonz
All
4
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Used in many movies/TV shows
It was used by Futurama and Studio Ghibli.
See More
Top
Con
Crashes a ton
If you are going to use this for a project, make sure you save frequently.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to learn
With a quick 20 minute tutorial, you can get off and running easily.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac
Technology:
C++
Hide
Get it
here
6
0
PosterMyWall
All
4
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Great tool for beginners
Unlike many other softwares, PosterMyWall has a less steep learning curve and designing is made even easier with a huge gallery of free customizable templates.
See More
Top
Con
Can't use offline
Since it is an online based program you will not be able to use it offline which is bad if you don't have internet, travel on airplanes a lot, don't want to pay extra for internet or have other reasons for not having internet available.
See More
Top
Pro
Available online
Requires no download prior to using, available on your browser. Usable on your desktop pc, laptop, tablet and mobile.
See More
Top
Pro
Simplistic Interface
Very easy to learn.
See More
Hide
0
5
1
GRAVIT
All
12
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Free
Gravit has a free version, but there is paid version with more features.
See More
Top
Con
Paid version
Expensive paid version that has many features you can find in free or cheaper applications.
See More
Top
Pro
Multi platform
Works on Windows, Mac and Linux.
See More
Top
Con
This does not appear to be a Web-design tool
Gravit appears to be a vector-art tool, and nothing more. Their homepage doesn't even mention Web design as far as I can see.
See More
Top
Pro
Actively developed
See More
Top
Con
Changing rapidly
The fast rate of growth/change for Gravit can be a pro in that in means plenty of new features. However, it also makes the product fairly unpredictable. For example: In the past year, Gravit was open sourced, then closed sourced again.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to export all assets
Gravit has a built in exporter to PDF, JPG, PNG and SVG.
See More
Top
Pro
Clean and helpful UI
The panels in Gravit adjust to contain the information needed based on the type of element selected, preventing the clutter that Photoshop often experiences.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to design multiple pages
The ability to assign layers to specific pages, and view single or multiple pages at once makes it easy to design an entire website without getting lost in thousands of layers. Easy to view multiple pages at one time.
See More
Top
Pro
Symbols and libraries
With Gravit you can re-use the same design for buttons, inputs, etc, in multiple places, with changes synced every where the element is used. It's also possible to set text to a shared style to sync text changes throughout the app.
See More
Top
Pro
Able to open Sketch files
The ability to open Sketch files makes it easier for Linux/Windows users to collaborate with people who use Sketch, which is macOS specific.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Linux, Windows, macOS, Web
License:
GPLv3+ or Commercial license
Available as:
Snap, AppImage, WebApp
Unoffical download location:
https://github.com/OliBridgman/gravit
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE or $99/yr
25
5
Gravit Designer
All
12
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Pro
Simple to understand and use
Very friendly interface.
See More
Top
Con
Too simple
If you have used vector illustration software for 10 years or more, you may find Gravit Designer too simple and confusing. Trade in your oil paints and brushes for Legos simple.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross-platform
It offers total portability to almost any platform.
See More
Top
Con
No longer offically licenced with a GPLv3+ version
In 2014 Quasado released Gravit.io having dual licensing: GNU GPLv3+ or a commercial license. This effectively made Gravit.io opensource, when they transitioned to "Gravit designer" they essentially dropped GPLv3+ license. You can still get the GPLv3+ licensed version of Gravit.io here: https://github.com/OliBridgman/gravit You can read the GPLv3+ licensing here: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html
See More
Top
Pro
Modern UI
See More
Top
Con
Confusing bugs
Sometimes Gravit Designer can randomly duplicate your files, causing you to waste a large amount of time trying to find the right one.
See More
Top
Pro
Friendly keyboard shortcuts
The keyboard shortcuts are very easy to access and remember.
See More
Top
Con
Pro Subscription
Gravit's many basic features are now included in Pro Subscription. Font Import, Bezigon, Swatches and various Blending Modes fall in Pro Subscription now.
See More
Top
Pro
Essential Tools and Effects
Gravit has many tools like Pen tool, Bezigon tool, Lasso tools. We can add Multiple Fills to an element also. It has many effects such as Drop Shadows, Blur, Recolor, Glows, etc. and much more.
See More
Top
Con
Very little information
Official sources do not provide a lot information about the program.
See More
Top
Con
No integration into the system
It uses it own theme and icons.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Linux, MacOS, Windows, ChromeOS, WebApp
License:
Commercial
Company:
Corel Corporation
Hide
See All
Experiences
$99/yr
56
11
Inkscape
All
29
Experiences
Pros
13
Cons
15
Specs
Top
Pro
Free and open source
Inkscape is GPL-licensed and maintains public repositories.
See More
Top
Con
Very slow startup on some systems
Depending on factors like how many fonts you have installed, Inkscape can take upwards of 30 seconds to launch.
See More
Top
Pro
Opens lots of file types
Inkscape supports many common formats for import (including SVG, Photoshop and Illustrator) and its plugin architecture allows more to be added.
See More
Top
Con
Uses its own SVG-format by default
Inkscape might use SVG as its default format, however this SVG's contains some additional SodiPodi/Inkscape additions that can be troublesome if you want to import the SVG into some other application.
See More
Top
Pro
Export to different file types
Files can be exported and saved as a "normal" svg, png, jpg, bmp etc. file.
See More
Top
Con
1.0 is sluggish
Inkscape 1.0 uses GTK 3 which is sluggish and slow for low spec systems( eg. ARM, Celeron, Pentium, Core-i3, Ryzen 3 or Athlon ) compared to previous versions.
See More
Top
Pro
Cross-platform
Pre-built binaries are available for Windows, Mac and Linux. Inkscape can be built from source on additional platforms.
See More
Top
Con
Buggy
Application is often buggy so it happens from time to time that the popup / right-click menu won't close and stays open. It crashes also sometimes randomly. This makes it almost unusable for productive / business use.
See More
Top
Pro
Integrates well into a X11-System
Its uses the X11 icon theme and desktop theme(GTK).
See More
Top
Con
Crashes very often
Inkscape encountered an internal error and will close now - is one of its standard messages.
See More
Top
Pro
It can do anything
A very powerful software that can do pretty match anything!
See More
Top
Con
Since 0.91 the gradient editor is gone
It is now only possible to edit a gradient on screen. but you can't set a stop to a specific percentage anymore.
See More
Top
Pro
Measurement Tool
This tool is extremely handy and can not be found in any other vector graphics programs out there.
See More
Top
Con
Limited work with ICC CMYK color scheme
Support for ICC color profiles only in SVG files.
See More
Top
Pro
Live Path Effects
Extremely powerful menu that offers more than 30 powerful Live Path Effects to apply to paths vastly enhancing the application functionality.
See More
Top
Con
Uses GTK
It looks an feels like an alien. It also uses now touch-based widgets instead of professional widgets.
See More
Top
Pro
Guides, Grids, and Canvas Rotation
Extremely handy features when building complex graphics using Inkscape.
See More
Top
Con
Y-axis inverted
0,0 coordinates begin in lower left corner, not upper left corner as SVG standards define in Inkscape 0.92.x. It seems this is now fixed in the 1.0 beta 2 version of the program.
See More
Top
Pro
Dark Theme Support
The new 1.0 beta 2 version finally got support for dark theme which normally is only available for commercial software like Affinity Serif, Adobe Illustrator.
See More
Top
Con
A toy for facebook-ist enthusiasts, not for professionals
It's a Linux niche mumbo-jumbo, same as GIMP for raster edit .
See More
Top
Pro
The new version 1.1 is looks and feels fantastic
Inskape got UI update: new dockable dialogs.
See More
Top
Con
Based on the GTK widget toolkit
Software is based on GTK, so it might not integrate well in non-GTK environments. It also requires many dependencies on those non-GTK desktops. It also adds dependencies to GTK-environments since it is written in C++ which requires the gtkmm wrapper/interface.
See More
Top
Pro
Interface is available in 29 languages
Basque, British English, Brazilian, Portuguese, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Icelandic, Indonesian, Italian, Korean, Latvian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Polish, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Turkish, Ukrainian, Urdu, Swedish.
See More
Top
Con
Mac version does not look as polished as its versions for Windows/Linux version for the 0.92.x version
It seems that Inkscape 1.0 beta 2 for Mac got some needed attention and it looks a lot better with dark theme support. native DMG installer and they got rid of X11 which is great.
See More
Top
Pro
It's really easy and fun
Vector graphics can be created and edited with Inkscape.
See More
Top
Con
Incompatible with previous versions
Sometimes backward compatibility breaks. For example, pre 0.92 SVGs are incompatible with later releases (due different default resolutions).
See More
Top
Con
No support for large printing machine system
No support for large printing machine environment, except exporting the resulting artwork to PDF.
See More
Top
Con
Under GNU GPL
It is released under GNU GPL which one of the restricted open source license.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, Linux, Unix
License:
GPL-2.0-or-later
Technology:
C++
Initial Release:
2003
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
249
52
GIMP
All
12
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Con
Unintuitive interface
GIMP doesn't embrace OS X application design, thus Mac users might have a hard time wrapping their heads around GIMP's interface.
See More
Top
Pro
Free, open source and cross-platform
GIMP is completely free and open source, meaning you can use GIMP and all of its features without spending a penny. This makes it an excellent case for artists or designers who may not have the budget to spend over 700 USD on Photoshop. It is also available for free on Windows, Mac OS and Linux. It's licensed under GPL with source code available here.
See More
Top
Con
Less features than other programs
Being a free program, it shouldn't be surprising that it has limited features. For those needing more advanced features for something more professional, GIMP just isn't for you.
See More
Top
Pro
Powerful
GIMP is the most feature rich free image editing tool. It has most image manipulation and workflow tools that you would expect from an image editing software and what it lacks it makes up with plugins.
See More
Top
Con
Lacks adjustment layers
Adjustment layers offer a non-destructive way of combining different photo manipulations. Without adjustment layers the only way to see changes is by irreversibly editing the image. They are promised in future updates.
See More
Top
Pro
Content-aware tools with a plugin
There's a content-aware fill plugin available for GIMP.
See More
Top
Con
Poor performance
See More
Top
Pro
Modular & single-window interface options
By default GIMP splits out each window, but you can check to use the one screen mode in options if you prefer.
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
Compared to to other photo editing software, GIMP is very light weight. In addition it isn't very resource-intensive, meaning you can put it on a flash drive and have it with you to load up on just about any computer.
See More
Top
Pro
Beginner-friendly
Gimp has less features than programs like Photoshop, but for a beginner, or someone not needing complicated options, Gimp is the perfect choice. It allows you to quickly do basic photo manipulation so you can easily get the product you need without having to worry about complicated features getting in the way.
See More
Top
Pro
Full channel support
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows 10/8/7; Linux; MacOS
License:
GPLv3+
Tethered capture:
No
Non-Distructive Editing:
No, Feature in development with GEGL
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
283
60
Font Awesome
All
15
Experiences
Pros
11
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
3332 icons to choose from
Font Awesome 5.1 offers 1264 free and 2068 payed icons.
See More
Top
Con
Too expensive
The icons I need are in the pay plan.
See More
Top
Pro
Large variety of icons
There is a wide range of web-related icons to choose from. Categories include web-application, directional, transportation and brand icons. See the full list of icons here.
See More
Top
Con
You will never use all icons
This means you'll have a lot of useless data (unused icons) being load into your application.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to use
See More
Top
Con
Font Awesome slows webpages
See More
Top
Pro
MIT licence for the code
See More
Top
Pro
Screen reader compatible
Other font icons have been known to have issues with this.
See More
Top
Pro
Font Aweseome 5 is here with over 929 icons and counting
The Pro version is very reasonable and gives you access to 2316 icons and counting. Across 3 weights! Very Nice!
See More
Top
Pro
Designed to be used with Bootstrap
Font Awesome can be used with any framework, however it's especially easy to use with Bootstrap.
See More
Top
Pro
Continuously updated
See More
Top
Pro
Can employ tree shaking to not bundle unused icons
See More
Top
Pro
IE7 support with older versions
IE7 support has been removed from Font Awesome 4.4.0. However you can still use an older version for IE7 support.
See More
Top
Pro
Customizable icons through stacking
Icons in Font Awesome can be restyled by stacking different borders and background to modify their meaning. For example, any icon can be turned into a bullet point by stacking it on a circle, or converted into its negative by stacking a red cancel icon on top of it.
See More
Specs
Glyphs:
2,018
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE-$99/year
94
25
Snapseed
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Top
Pro
G+ integration
Google has also integrated most of Snapseeds features into the G+ app as well.
See More
Top
Con
Limited social integration
Snapseed supports sharing with email, Facebook, and Twitter, but leaves out important networks like Instagram and Flickr.
See More
Top
Pro
Clever Interface
Snapseed interface is controlled with swipes, up and down to choose the option and left and right to choose the intensity. It does take a bit of getting used to, but once you have the interface is very nice and easy to use.
See More
Top
Pro
Selective adjustments
In order to make adjustments to just one part of an image, tap and hold the box on the top right corner of the screen.
See More
Top
Pro
Free
With the acquisition of Snapseed by Google, the app was lowered in price from $4.99 to free.
See More
Top
Pro
High quality photo editing
Snapseed includes many features of high end photo editing software, auto correct, image tuning and other effects. Snapseed makes editing your photos easy and gives the photographer many options to choose from in how they present their images. Scrolling up and down lets the user choose from different effects and tools, swiping left to right determines the intensity. This app includes many effects such as tilt shift that are hard to find elsewhere.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
23
0
Photoshop
All
19
Experiences
Pros
9
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Pro
Industry standard
Photoshop is used by professionals everywhere in a wide variety of fields including photography, graphic design and digital art. It is the de facto standard for image manipulation. If you've seen a magazine ad featuring a model, you've probably seen the effects of Photoshop. You won't be alone when using Photoshop.
See More
Top
Con
Expensive
The standalone version of Photoshop costs $19.99/month, though it can be leased as part of the Creative Cloud Photography bundle that includes Lightroom for $9.99/month.
See More
Top
Pro
Trove of plugins that extend functionality are available
A wide variety of plugins that add new effects, improve existing functionality and simplify workflow are available.
See More
Top
Con
Latest versions of Photoshop are subscription-only
While you can still buy CS6 from 2012 without needing a subscription by contacting Adobe support or the cut-down Photoshop Elements, any full-version version of Photoshop past CS6 requires a subscription.
See More
Top
Pro
Lots of tutorials
There's a huge number of both free and paid tutorials available online. Websites like Lynda.com offer premium high-quality, in-depth tutorials, but there are plenty of free alternatives to be found on YouTube, blogs and specialized sites on the Internet.
See More
Top
Con
Learning it can take some time
While you can relatively quickly learn how to perform a few basic image editing tasks, understanding Photoshop's ins and outs can be difficult. It's partially due to the sheer amount of functionality that Photoshop packs (and understanding that some of the advanced functionality can take a while to understand on its own), and partially due to it being aimed at professionals with little hand-holding for novice users.
See More
Top
Pro
A cheaper, standalone version called Photoshop Elements is available
A stripped down version of Photoshop, called Photoshop Elements can be bought as a standalone application for $100.
See More
Top
Con
Very slow
It needs a very power CPU and GPU and many GBs of RAM and still it is so slow.
See More
Top
Pro
Includes powerful content-aware tools
Photoshop includes content-aware tools such as content-aware fill that can fill in a select area based on what surrounds it.
See More
Top
Con
Stop paying, it vaporises
With Adobes adaptation of the "subscription world" PhotoShop too is available as subscription software only. This means it will never become yours. And if you stop paying, you won't have any PhotoShop any more. Whether you are OK with that or not, it also means that PhotoShop for a large part becomes software for those "who can afford it". Or "push cost to others". Like customers of professionals. Which is also a way to become an "industry standard".
See More
Top
Pro
Packs a staggering amount of functionality
Photoshop is the most fully featured image editing software available today allowing you to perform highly advanced image manipulation. It has tools for RAW image adjustments, lens correction, retouching, image stitching, HDR, fixing framing. It supports most professional color modes and file formats. It includes extensive lists of filters, styles, effects, fonts as well as tools for painting, sketching and typography work. It understands both raster and vector graphics. It even includes tools for video editing, working with 3D objects and support for 3D printing.
See More
Top
Con
Affinity Photo is just as good at a fraciton of the price
Switching from Photoshop to Affinity Photo and it's hard to notice the difference quality of a professional's work. They say that PS is the industry standard, but so very few pros that tried Affinity Photo ever look back.
See More
Top
Pro
Integrates with Creative Cloud
You can save all projects directly to the Creative Cloud allowing you to access them from any device and with any relevant Adobe software.
See More
Top
Con
Not good enough to be so expensive
Probably the only big advantage Photoshop has over the other free software is the adjustment layers. But still too expensive for just one feature.
See More
Top
Pro
Creative Cloud Photography subscription includes Lightroom
Lightroom is another image editing software from Adobe that's specifically designed for photo editing and managing of large quantities of digital images.
See More
Top
Con
Batch editing of images is not straightforward
Photoshop is designed to work extensively on one image at a time and while batch editing support exists, it's not that intuitive to use.
See More
Top
Pro
Mobile companion apps available
There's a free mobile app available for iOS, Android & Windows Phone.
See More
Top
Con
Asset management capabilities are lacking
In Photoshop asset management is done through a separate program called Bridge. As Bridge is supposed to be a file management tool for not just Photoshop's files, but for files generated by all of Adobe's applications it covers a breadth of capabilities, but not depth.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS
License:
Hagu
Tethered capture:
via Bridge
Hide
See All
Experiences
$9.99/mo
114
47
Adobe Illustrator CC
All
18
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Con
Subscription model
Illustrator CC requires a $19.99/mo (minimum) subscription to use. Adobe no longer sells previous versions of Illustrator.
See More
Top
Pro
Amazing integration with all other Adobe Software (PS, Ae, Id...)
See More
Top
Con
Heavy use of CPU/RAM
See More
Top
Pro
It's the industry standard
See More
Top
Con
Steep learning curve
See More
Top
Pro
Advanced tools
See More
Top
Con
Very slow
Even in very good computers Illustrator is very slow.
See More
Top
Pro
Has all the vector tools you could dream of
See More
Top
Con
You never truly own this software
As soon as you stop paying you to lose access to the software. This should be illegal.
See More
Top
Pro
Flexible, non-intrusive interface
Small palette menus and the ability to save multiple menu layouts keep the UI out of the way.
See More
Top
Con
Install useless and intrusive software
When you install any Adobe product it also installs lots of useless and intrusive software and services. It adds two services and up to three auto-starting software that runs when you start your operating system and keep running constantly. One is for auto-updating, others for "checking" if you are not a pirate and some others that seems to be just to collect information.
See More
Top
Pro
There are many tutorials on the internet
See More
Top
Con
Imprecise coordinates
Oftentimes your 140 is 139.9997 and as a vector program it doesn't rely much on precision.
See More
Top
Pro
Frequent updates
The CC subscription model means that major releases are no longer necessary, so existing users gain immediate access to new features.
See More
Top
Con
No proper selection mode
In a vector-art program, the critical selection mode is the one in which objects must be fully enclosed by the selection marquee to be selected. In the simple example shown here, selecting all the circles should merely require you to draw a selection rectangle around them. But in Illustrator, there's no way to avoid selecting other objects as well, even though they're not totally enclosed by the selection box. Year after year, Adobe fails to fix this bizarre oversight, making Illustrator a tedious pain to use.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy to learn
It's easy to learn how to work with this software.
See More
Top
Con
Buggy
Software can be very buggy at times.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows; Mac
License:
Proprietary
Initial Release:
1987
Exports:
.ai; .eps; .ait; .pdf; .fxg; .svgz; .svg; .png; .bmp; .dwg; .dxf; .emf; .swf; .jpg; .pct; .psd; .tif; .tga; .txt; .wmf; .html; .gif
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
$19.99+/mo
60
37
Photo Lab PRO Picture Editor
All
4
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Top
Pro
User friendly
The interface is clean, simple, and easy to navigate.
See More
Top
Con
Users must pay for ad-free version
For the ad-free version, it costs $3.99 for Android users.
See More
Top
Pro
Very stable
This app is much more stable than other apps of similar nature
See More
Top
Pro
Over 620 frames, effects, and montages.
Although Photo Lab is a little more expensive than other apps, but the variety of features makes the price well worth the benefit.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
6
0
Photoshop Express
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Great for editing portraits
This app includes blemish removal and easy red eye removal
See More
Top
Pro
It's free!
Restrictions apply, extra features are available with a monthly fee.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports multi touch gestures
Multi touch gestures include rotating images, or swiping to flip the image
See More
Top
Pro
Autofix feature
With one touch, adjust contrast, exposure, and white balance.
See More
Top
Pro
Shares directly to Facebook
Photoshop Express lets users public their edited photos to Facebook straight from the app.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Android, iOS
Hide
Free
5
0
Pixlr Editor
All
10
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
4
Top
Pro
Works with Google Drive
Can be used to directly edit images right from Google Drive after installing its Chrome App.
See More
Top
Con
Requires Flash
See More
Top
Pro
Can save to cloud or download
See More
Top
Con
Ads
There are ads on the main page of the site, making for a less than stellar fit on screen. This can of course be countered by using an ad blocker in ones browser, though this does not work when using the Chrome Web Store app (which is the same as the site) as adblocker's do not work on Chrome Webstore apps.
See More
Top
Pro
Has a Chrome App
See More
Top
Con
Some known bugs
If you save and the name you give has system weird characters like :, <, >... it'll simply refuse to save and do nothing (you'll have to give a name without those characters first). Saving to cloud is broken in many cases Merge down layer with mask changes actual rendering (workaround: first apply layer mask) ...
See More
Top
Pro
Can zoom using mouse wheel
See More
Top
Con
Lacks drag and drop support
Doesn't yet support dragging & droping images in to the browser window.
See More
Top
Pro
Has advanced filters
See More
Top
Pro
Has most Photoshop filters
See More
Hide
See All
Experiences
Get it
here
16
3
Paint.NET
All
10
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Easy to learn and use
Unlike most photo editing software, Paint.NET is simple to learn and easy to use. This means less time is spent learning the in's and out's of Paint.NET and more time on photo editing. For those who only edit photos sporadically and don't have time to invest in learning complicated tools for editing, Paint.Net will suit your needs.
See More
Top
Con
Only available on Windows
Paint.NET is only available on Windows.
See More
Top
Pro
Free software
There is no charge for this software; but donations are welcomed.
See More
Top
Con
No project-based interface
You can only edit a single image at a time in Paint.NET. For example, in other tools you can open 5 or a 100 images at the same time, and stack those windows in all directions. Furthermore, when you are editing in Paint.NET you can only "view" a single image at a time, even though you can have multiple images open. This limits your zooming ability, as the image will go fullscreen quite quickly, and hide parts of it behind the floating toolbars which can not be embedded anywhere on the screen.
See More
Top
Pro
Lightweight
Paint.net provides a streamlined but effective core tool set. Support for advanced and niche features is provided through modular plugins, allowing the user to install only what's needed.
See More
Top
Pro
Actively developed
The project is active and being continually expanded and refined.
See More
Top
Pro
Active and friendly community
The forums are filled with tutorials, as well as people who are friendly and eager to help.
See More
Top
Pro
Plugins allow extra functionality
Plugins can be made by anyone in the community, and are offered for download on the forum. They extend the capabilities of Paint.NET to cover most tasks.
See More
Top
Pro
HiDPI support
Paint.NET supports fully HiDPI displays, with no scaling problems.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows
Technology:
.NET
Hide
See All
Experiences
FREE
77
15
PhotoFunia
All
3
Experiences
Pros
1
Cons
2
Top
Pro
Printing service
Also offers a printing service for cards and posters, which is not free of course.
See More
Top
Con
Not an editor
Not really a photo editor.
See More
Top
Con
Not much choice in animations
Not really a site to create animated cards.
See More
Hide
Free
1
0
Photo Editor
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Offers an extensive array of effects
"Adjust color, add effects, rotate, crop, resize, frame, clone, and draw on your photos"
See More
Top
Con
Extremely generic name
This makes it very difficult for users to accurately research "Photo Editor" on the internet.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports "draw mode"
You are able to add a personal touch by drawing on your photos using your Android
See More
Top
Pro
Supports multiple languages
Supported languages include: English, Korean, Russian, Spanish, Dutch, Finnish, German, French, Japanese, Portuguese(Brazil), Italian, Catalan, Traditional Chinese, Hebrew, Simplified Chinese, Czech, Romanian, Polish, Hungarian, Swedish, Greek, Arabic, Turkish, Bengali, Indonesian, Persian, Vietnamese, Malaysian
See More
Top
Pro
Makes EXIF data available to see and manipulate
See More
Top
Pro
Save images in multiple formats
Formats include: JPEG, PNG, GIF, and PDF.
See More
Hide
Get it
here
1
0
Blender
All
25
Experiences
Pros
16
Cons
8
Specs
Top
Pro
Free and open source
Blender is licensed under the GPL. Some Blender modules such as the Cycles rendering engine are licensed under the Apache 2.0 license.
See More
Top
Con
Too many possibilities, no unified workflow
The operations are not optimized enough for specific tasks.
See More
Top
Pro
Wide import and export format support
Support lots of modern 3D formats including DAE and FBX - ideal for game developers.
See More
Top
Con
The physics engine is a bit lagging behind, especially the destruction physics
See More
Top
Pro
Has a powerful rendering engine
Blender runs the Cycles path tracing engine under the hood. Cycles is a very powerful rendering engine capable of full path tracing (light fall off, caustics, volumetrics). It is mostly compatible with OpenCL and CUDA rendering, and is implementing mycropolygon displacement features. The upcoming release has a viewport engine called EEVEE whereby you can see and interact with your work in render mode in real time!
See More
Top
Con
Difficult learning curve
Blender has a history of being unintuitive, but the 2.8 overhaul made the program far easier for beginners to pick up, and changes continue to be made to further improve the experience. However, there is still a learning curve.
See More
Top
Pro
Python extensibility
Blender embeds Python 3, which can be used to write add-ons, tools, extend the interface, rig characters and automate tasks.
See More
Top
Con
Not good for Industrial Design because it uses average vertex normals
You can not create a hard surface with a radius continuity degree along a surface using a specific radius value.
See More
Top
Pro
Powerful animation suite
Blender provides a full rigging system, and automates animation by interpolating between keyframe positions.
See More
Top
Con
Vertex normal issues on edges after boolean operations.
After creating a simple boolean operation the vertex normals are broken. A lot of work to fix the issue and you loos surface continuity.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports both low-poly and hi-poly modeling
See More
Top
Con
Bad vertex normal after boolean operations
Does not handle well polygon intersections. And need tweaking by hand points or adding average vertex normals via modifiers.
See More
Top
Pro
Regular release schedule
Releases are made every ~3 months.
See More
Top
Con
Does not handle NURBs
Is not capable of real hard surface for industrial design because is not able to reproduce surface continuity degree as a NURBs does and average vertex normal destroy surface radius.
See More
Top
Pro
Sculpting and 3D painting features
Although Blender's 3d painting and sculpting tools (mostly painting) are not at par with specialized software like Substance Painter, ZBrush, or Mari, it is more than capable of getting most jobs done if the user takes the time to learn and understand it.
See More
Top
Con
Poor particle system
The Blender particle system can at times be a little limiting and finicky (and buggy) to get working. Even if it can get most straight forward jobs done, it is far from the most advanced system, and could benefit largely from advancements.
See More
Top
Pro
Includes video editing & compositing tools
Blender's node-based compositor has comprehensive video sequencing and post-processing features.
See More
Top
Pro
Node based modeling support
See More
Top
Pro
Keyboard shortcuts
Good keyboard shortcuts for everything. Keep your left hand on the keyboard and your right hand on the mouse.
See More
Top
Pro
Very useful for a freelancer
It offers a round solution (it covers many areas and professional fields) for a freelancer, for free, constantly updated, very polished, and allowing high quality results that clients do require. After some learning, it becomes very useful for professional work.
See More
Top
Pro
Has a large community
There's a huge community to help you get started immediately.
See More
Top
Pro
Coherent and streamlined workflow / internal use logic
The trick with Blender is to get used to its usage philosophy, as it keeps consistent through all the application. Once you get it, every feature or addition is learnt naturally, almost effortlessly.
See More
Top
Pro
Very versatile
You don't have to switch between software when you want to do different things. Because modeling, sculpting, composting, video editing etc can all be done in blender.
See More
Top
Pro
Generative geometry using nodes
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac, FreeBSD
Technology:
C, Python
3D:
Yes
2D:
Yes (as of 2.8)
See All Specs
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
663
95
Krita
All
12
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Easy to use layout
All the most used and useful tools are easy to find in Krita's UI and are often just one click away. They are not hidden behind menus or dropdowns.
See More
Top
Con
New features are not tested thoroughly
Since releases are so often and with little time between them, usually new features are not tested a lot and this can bring a lot of bugs with them. Which fortunately are quickly patched in the next release.
See More
Top
Pro
Constantly updated
Krita is getting constant releases with updates and bug fixes. New features are added at a pace that far surpasses the other alternatives.
See More
Top
Con
Documentation is lacking
Krita's official documentation is incomplete in some areas, especially for new features that are constantly added. But this is compensated with it's great design and usability which makes it easier to understand how things work.
See More
Top
Pro
Free and open source
Krita is completely free and open source. They have raised a couple of successful Kickstarters in the past to get the initial financing and now they are accepting donations.
See More
Top
Con
Poor touch controls
They are still pretty much a WIP. But they are getting there.
See More
Top
Pro
Developed in part by KDE, which has a great community and therefore great support.
KDE has a long history of making solid applications.
See More
Top
Con
Working with text is not that pleasant
See More
Top
Pro
Amazing support for displaying brushes
Krita's preset brushes are one of the default dockers. Each brush has a preview on mouseover that shows a detailed view of the type of brush involved. All the brushes also have useful and descriptive names such as "HP Pencil" or "Textured Fuzzy".
See More
Top
Pro
Very customizable
Although the UI is rather busy, Krita is very customizable. The editing window can be themed and the sidebar can be customized extensively throw many dockers or panes.
See More
Top
Pro
Easy editing in a tiled view
Tiled view that shows your image tiled in the editor, and permits you to edit it as you are seeing it tiled. If the brush passes out of your texture, it will just automatically wrap back the painting to the other side of the original texture, while permitting you to paint and see the results on any of the tiled "clones" (the shortcut key to activate this is w by default).
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac, Android
License:
Open source
Technology:
C++, Qt
Hide
See All
Experiences
Free
489
77
Lightroom
All
13
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
6
Specs
Top
Pro
Excellent asset management capabilities
Lightroom allows, for example, organizing images based on folders, color labels, flags, rating, keywords, GPS location, it can automatically create smart albums (albums that automatically update based on set rules) and it can be set to automatically backup, rename based on set rules, apply default processing, add keywords to images on import. It offers that functionality in an intuitive way and allows extensively customizing layout, behavior and workflow of managing assets to better suit your needs.
See More
Top
Con
No layer-based image editing capabilities
There are no layers removing any ability to blend images, create composits, overlay text, etc.
See More
Top
Pro
HDR support
Can merge multiple shots into one in order to expand dynamic range.
See More
Top
Con
Hot folder option could be better
It can take a couple of seconds for Lightroom to check the folder for incoming images and that can noticeably slow down the workflow. Additionally, only the last image is imported as active.
See More
Top
Pro
Facial recognition helps find and tag people
Lightroom has built-in facial recognition support that can be used to find the same person in any collection of photographs.
See More
Top
Con
There's a learning curve
See More
Top
Pro
A good number of cameras have built-in lens profiles for lens distortion correction
Lightroom has over 900 lens profiles from all kinds of manufacturers, including major lens brands like Canon, Nikon, Leica, Pentax, Ricoh, etc. You can see the full list of supported lenses here. Lens profiles will in most cases speed up the process of correcting lens distortion down to 1-2 clicks.
See More
Top
Con
Telemetry
Adobe is interested in what you do with "their" software. Just install wireshark and see the story unfold. Don't have that or too difficult? Just take a bank note, scan it. See if you can get it on your screen...
See More
Top
Pro
Intuitive interface that's streamlined for a photographer's workflow
At a high level the interface is organized into broad groups of tools called workflow modules. Modules like "Library" for asset management and "Develop" for manipulating the photos. Each module displays only those tools that are needed for that task. This allows you to separate concerns between tasks and reduces interface clutter. When you're, for example, developing the image, you're not bothered by interface tools relating to exporting it. Within each module tools are grouped in a logical manner. Develop module, for example, will group tools relating to basic image adjustment, lens correction, and effects. And there are a plethora of keyboard shortcuts that improve the workflow speed even further. At all times you can easily navigate between images you're working via arrow keys, quickly compare images before and after making edits with \, or see side by side comparisons with y.
See More
Top
Con
Expensive and subscription
As with other software offerings, Adobes portfolio keeps giving. For the customer/ user however, this means that you never own your software, but you rent it. Until the point your landlord throws you out.
See More
Top
Pro
Supports tethered capture
You can connect your camera directly to Lightroom and have Lightroom display images as soon as they are captured.
See More
Top
Con
Proprietary
As all Adobe software it is proprietary, closed source.
See More
Specs
Platforms:
Windows OSX
Tethered capture:
Yes
Hide
See All
Experiences
$9.99/mo
45
15
Built By the Slant team
Find the best product instantly.
4.7 star rating
Add to Chrome
Add to Edge
Add to Firefox
Add to Opera
Add to Brave
Add to Safari
Try it now - it's free
{}
undefined
url next
price drop