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Start your free trialAbbey Jackson
815 PointsPhotoshop alternatives
Will Treehouse develop any graphics courses / tracks using software other than Adobe? At $20/mo I can't afford Adobe...that's $240/yr!! I'm a childcare worker who is self employed...in other words, I don't earn a lot and that is a LOT of money even if it is deductible. I purchase my software, even apps, I'm organized and professional that way when it comes to business. I want to learn how to make my own graphics/buttons/design elements for the website I'm hoping to build after taking Treehouse courses but not at $240/yr. It's almost unfair that the only course Treehouse offers is for such an expensive product. Please tell me there are courses for less expensive options in the works?
9 Answers
jesdavpet
21,489 PointsYou can do pretty much anything for free using open source software. However, what you save financially, you may have to pay for with your time and patience.
You will have to learn your way around the differences in how alternative software works -- but the end result will be the same even if you aren't using the industry standard software and you're not on a Mac! Its your choice!
Here's a list of some reasonable alternatives to commonly needed expensive software suites. Incidentally all of these are platform agnostic and have versions for Windows, Mac OSX, and Linux which is a bonus:
- Raster images (like Photoshop) use Gimp (http://www.gimp.org)
- Vector images (like Illustrator) use Inkscape (http://www.inkscape.org)
- Code editor (like Textmate/SublimeText) use gEdit (https://projects.gnome.org/gedit/)
- Programming IDE (like xCode but not for iOS apps) use Eclipse (http://www.eclipse.org/)
- Document editing (like MS Office) use Libre Office (http://www.libreoffice.org/)
Also, all of the above have tutorial sections referenced on their websites, not on Treehouse though.
Have fun! :-)
Matthew Willmott
9,426 PointsAbegael, are you on Mac? If so, have you looked at Pixelmator and Sketch?
Matthew Willmott
9,426 PointsYeah I can totally understand your concerns. There is a lack of easy-to-find and good quality tutorials on other software packages. It would be interesting to hear if Treehouse will do even just a few videos on other software.
Abbey Jackson
815 PointsHey thanks Mat! :)
Mat Helme
Treehouse Guest TeacherNp Abegael Jackson, anytime!
- Mat
Abbey Jackson
815 Pointsahhh no I should have mentioned I'm on Windows 7 though I own Win8 too so if I need to upgrade for this I will. I just don't like Win8 so I went back. Also, there is no course on Treehouse for those. That is my main question (I know about alternatives for Windows like Gimp). I can't take the courses offered because I don't have the expensive products the courses are based on.
Abbey Jackson
815 PointsI am actually really surprised since Treehouse seems to me to be targeting people just like me. That is, people who are planning to do their own projects, not projects that can budget in hundreds of dollars just for the software. If I wanted to run a design company I'd take $400 courses locally, not such inexpensive online courses. And it seems especially strange to me that they would market themselves as such an inexpensive way to learn and then teach products that require a lot of money to use.
Mike Gabriel
8,402 PointsTreehouse courses are teaching you the current industry standards. Photoshop has been the king of the image editors for many years, and shows no sign of letting that go. It's unfortunately pricey but is a necessary skill for someone looking to get into design. Resume item.
As Matt said, there are tons of alternatives out there. Free and Paid, I'm personally a heavy user of Sketch. But that doesn't help you either, being in the Windows world. Paint.NET has been around for a long time, it's free and might be worth checking out - http://www.getpaint.net/
The other thing that you will notice here, Macs tend to dominate with the development and design crowd, for good reason. You'll notice this is the tutorial videos and a lot of the users on the forum. That's just how the industry worked out and if you plan on sticking around the design world, perhaps a good investment would be looking into a Mac down the road. Mac minis can be had relatively cheap and work with your standard monitor).
Nathan F.
30,773 PointsWhile not a completely ideal solution, you might still be able to find a student edition of Photoshop CS6 at a local community college or something like that--it will still be in the ballpark of $200, but it'll be a one-time payment, rather than a monthly charge. However, Adobe is moving toward a subscription-based cloud for all of their software, so over time CS6 will become dated. That said, it'd be fully capable of doing all the basic design work you'd need to do for years to come.
Some of the freebie alternatives, like GIMP, are functionally similar to Photoshop and it may be possible to do a lot of the Treehouse coursework with those tools--you'll just probably spend a bit more time looking for the GIMP equivalent in menus. Hope this helps somehow.
Abbey Jackson
815 PointsThis does help, thanks for the suggestion. Maybe I will try following a couple PS lessons with GIMP and see how doable it is (hey, at least I'll learn the menus really really well!) :)
James Barnett
39,199 Points>
I want to learn how to make my own graphics/buttons/design elements
I've been learning web design and I've never opened graphics software. With CSS3 and icon fonts you can do quite a lot, here's some of the stuff I've done http://codepen.io/jamesbarnett. You can use mockup software & photo editing software to do most of what you need to do in Web Design.
Of course being a graphic designer is totally different, they live in Photoshop/Illustrator.
Abbey Jackson
815 PointsThis I didn't know. Well, I knew you can do that stuff but I didn't realize you can get away with only doing that stuff. Are there tutorials/lessons within the design stream here on Treehouse that will get me started with these methods?
James Barnett
39,199 PointsI don't think there's any coverage of photo editing on Treehouse. However the only thing that covers Photoshop is Photoshop Foundations which mostly covers graphic designer skills and Illustrator covers creating icons in Illustrator. I'm not sure what software if any will be used in the Logo Design course.
I personally don't worry about them too much because I'm not an illustrator/graphic designer and I know from a friend whose pro graphic designer that logo/icon design is one of the hardest areas of graphic design. So if I need an icon I look for it and if I need a logo ask someone to make me one because logo design is hard to do well and very central to a brand. I am very curious about what will be in the logo design course.
Check out Design Foundations, Aesthetic Foundations,Usability Foundations they cover how to think about design instead of focusing about what button to click to make a certain shape.
Mat Helme
Treehouse Guest TeacherHey Abegael Jackson check out Guil Hernandez post on the Treehouse blog titled 'CSS Filter Effects'. This post goes over the basics of filter effects.
James Barnett
39,199 PointsJames Barnett
39,199 PointsPersonally I prefer notepad++ as a code editor on Windows, it's free & open source.