There's a lot of them involved. Notion for script writing, OBS for screen caps, Audition for audio, Premiere Pro and After Effects for video, animations, transitions and motion graphics, and of course Illustrator and sometimes Photoshop for thumbnails and other assets :)
Your videos are in credible and so professionally presented ... the materials are clear, substantive, graphics incredible, and you teach basics with such clarity ... thank you ... SUBSCRIBED!!
Great comparison video. What will be best to use if I want to create high defination wallart, or desktop wallpapers? If I create a wallpaper using AI and then edit using APS can I still be able to export the file in high defination?
In any applications you can export the files in high definition. But in Photoshop, since you're working with raster images, you have to be more careful with the image size you start with. Vectors can be scaled indefinitely without loosing quality, but raster images have a set number of pixels.
Illustrator. But if you want to add raster elements, like images, Photoshop is a great place to edit them and get them ready the way you want to add to Illustrator later on.
I have little experience with InDesign, so I can't give you specifics. However, InDesign is focused on publishing and layout, working with multi-paged documents. That's not to say you can't create ads there, but optimizing a workflow for documents with several pages is its strenght (though, I'm sure it lacks a lot of tools and effects that Illustrator has). I believe traditionally you'd use both softwares together, creating graphics and assets in Illustrator and using InDesign to lay out those assets along with the text (assuming, again, you're working with several pages, like a book or a magazine).
Well, you're technically right. Monitors reproduce images through pixels, so yeah, everything is a pixel. But while everything we see is ultimately made up of pixels, vector images are not stored as pixels. They are stored as mathematical instructions that can be rendered into pixels at any size. This allows vector images to remain sharp and clear no matter how much you zoom in or resize them. Did that make any sense? :P
@@AndyTellsThings Ahhh so essentially when we zoom in or out, the vector image is recalculated at that specific size. Like relative to our screen. Thanks a lot for your response.
Wow, i really love this tutorial. You opened my eyes further to see more difference between Vectors and Bitmaps. Thanks i appreciate your teachings.
Glad it was helpful!
As a beginner this was much needed! Well explained thanx🙌
Glad you enjoyed it! :)
Thanks for this wonderful section.
Learned the science behind "image & vector" from you.
Glad to be of help, friend! Keep on! :)
Thanks Andy, you thought this better than most videos I see here... Thank you
This video needs to be shared
You earnt a subscriber, even I knew these all things, but I loved the way you presented them
Also, could you please tell me what tools did you used to make these videos
There's a lot of them involved. Notion for script writing, OBS for screen caps, Audition for audio, Premiere Pro and After Effects for video, animations, transitions and motion graphics, and of course Illustrator and sometimes Photoshop for thumbnails and other assets :)
the most useful video ive seen in a while! 👍
Your videos are in credible and so professionally presented ... the materials are clear, substantive, graphics incredible, and you teach basics with such clarity ... thank you ... SUBSCRIBED!!
Glad you like them, my friend! Welcome aboard!
I use both daily. Cant live without either one.
Can't say I use Photoshop daily, but I would definitely rather not live without it as well :P
What do you use them for? Just curios
i'm very new for both, i can be clear from here thanks a lot!
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR THIS INFORMATIVE VIDEO!
Nicely explained! Please make a video on comparing Illustrator and Microsoft Visio.
Your videos are super informational, and loved them. Really you should get lot of views and subs. Keep on, all the best
Thank you for the kind message, my friend. There's not rush, views and subs are coming :) slow and steady wins the race! Hehe
As a ARCH student I use both.
I mostly use Illustrator because it's dwg. File support and PS for it's skew function,
Love your tutorials. Thank you man.
Glad you like them!
amazing video thanks a lot! liked and subscribed!
Awesome, thank you! :)
🙏🤍
Great info! Thank you!
Nice and clear
Think you very much ❤
You're welcome 😊
first minute of the video, solved all my problems, great lol!!
Glad it helped! :)
Thanks for sharingggg
Thanks
As a Ui artist in the games industry, Illustrator is my staple but I still use photoshop for finalising/exporting assets with scripts.
Ooooh, I know scripts in PS can be very powerful, but I never dug too deep into them.
Are you a roblox UI artist
What do you think about Coreldraw? Please reply.
Thanks
Insightful
yes
Good video ❤
Helpfull vdeo ❤
Thank you for another good video. I was looking for it. It cleared my confusion. 👍
Glad it was helpful!
Awesome video!
Glad you enjoyed it!
it was helpfulll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!🧡🧡🧡
Could you please share, how you edit your videos.
good explanation]
Glad you liked it
Nice
Meaning for flyers its PS or AI?
Great comparison video. What will be best to use if I want to create high defination wallart, or desktop wallpapers? If I create a wallpaper using AI and then edit using APS can I still be able to export the file in high defination?
In any applications you can export the files in high definition. But in Photoshop, since you're working with raster images, you have to be more careful with the image size you start with. Vectors can be scaled indefinitely without loosing quality, but raster images have a set number of pixels.
Which software is good for poster designing?
Illustrator. But if you want to add raster elements, like images, Photoshop is a great place to edit them and get them ready the way you want to add to Illustrator later on.
❤
Good
Every tool Photoshop
I'm not as proficient in Photoshop as I am in Illustrator, but perhaps in the future :)
How about Ai vs ID? I've always create ads in ID because that is what I learned to use. I've dabbled in Ai but find it difficult.
I have little experience with InDesign, so I can't give you specifics. However, InDesign is focused on publishing and layout, working with multi-paged documents. That's not to say you can't create ads there, but optimizing a workflow for documents with several pages is its strenght (though, I'm sure it lacks a lot of tools and effects that Illustrator has). I believe traditionally you'd use both softwares together, creating graphics and assets in Illustrator and using InDesign to lay out those assets along with the text (assuming, again, you're working with several pages, like a book or a magazine).
Why pay for Illustrator if I can just use MS Paint to design logos and graphics? It’s free after all!
This is what I expect of a True Graphic Designer™.
@@AndyTellsThings Are you agreed with "moviemellon" statement? A Graphics Designer can't say that one software is good and except it all are garbage.
@@umcedits Hahahaha no, I do not agree with him, he's just a friend who's making a joke
@@AndyTellsThings Ohh Right
@@AndyTellsThings I want to ask you something Is it good to Use Crack version of Photoshop And Illustrator?
exploring your channel......................
I thought everything we see on the screen was a pixel. This is weird.
Well, you're technically right. Monitors reproduce images through pixels, so yeah, everything is a pixel. But while everything we see is ultimately made up of pixels, vector images are not stored as pixels. They are stored as mathematical instructions that can be rendered into pixels at any size. This allows vector images to remain sharp and clear no matter how much you zoom in or resize them. Did that make any sense? :P
@@AndyTellsThings Ahhh so essentially when we zoom in or out, the vector image is recalculated at that specific size. Like relative to our screen. Thanks a lot for your response.
@@SpeaksYourWord Yes, that's exactly it :)
In Jesus' Name Amen ✝️
Thanks