EDITOR'S NOTES:
WOW!! This blew up on Twitter in the best possible way. I've heard so much great and much-needed feedback and have been pouring through all of your recommendations. I've added many of them to this post, and will likely continue updating this list as I learn more, so please continue sharing and not letting the Adobe bastards grind you down!!
The other day I saw a tweet that ignited a fury in me I still haven’t gotten over.
Goddamn it Adobe. |
The tweet, by user @burgerdrome, explained that Adobe is raising the price of their Creative Cloud subscription from $39.99 per month to $48.99 per month. For one person. One person!!! This goes beyond unfair, soars past unjust, and teeters at the edge of criminal.
You see, dear reader, I hate any company that tries to exploit the already poor-as-shit creator community, as I myself am a member of that group. However, I have a particular case of the ass against Adobe. Adobe, to me, symbolizes everything I hate about both capitalism and Western civilization’s complete disregard of the arts and humanities as not just valuable, but necessary parts of life.
But I’m not writing this to preach or complain. Instead, I’m taking a more proactive approach to my frustration. Instead, I’ve scoured the internet and rounded up free or cheap alternatives to every major Adobe CC product, many of which I personally use because I fucking hate Adobe so goddamn much.
In future blog posts, I’ll go through each of these programs and talk about them more in-depth. But I feel a sense of urgency to get this post out to the masses, so for now, here are just names and links.
Side note: Because I only have a PC, I’ve only looked at PC apps. While many of these programs may also have Mac versions, I didn’t make a point of confirming, because frankly if you can afford a Mac computer, you probably don’t need this article anyway.
All of these apps are free to use. Italicized apps are free but have premium versions. Bolded apps are what I have used and can personally vouch for, at least within the scope of my own work.
IF YOU DRAW OR DESIGN
Instead of ILLUSTRATOR, try INKSCAPE
IF YOU MAKE PICTURES MOVE
Instead of PREMIERE, try DAVINCI RESOLVE or HITFILM EXPRESS
IF YOU BUILD WEBSITES OR SOFTWARE
IF YOU DO STUFF THAT REQUIRES THESE OTHER PROGRAMS
Instead of INCOPY, try LOVING YOURSELF AND USING LITERALLY ANYTHING ELSE (WHO USES THIS???)
IF YOU NEED STOCK PHOTOS OR FONTS
Instead of ADOBE FONTS, try GOOGLE FONTS or FONT SQUIRREL
BONUS: If you need FREE MUSIC OR SOUND EFFECTS, try YOUTUBE AUDIO LIBRARY, INCOMPETECH, or SOUNDBIBLE
If you need CLIP ART, try OPENCLIPART
If you need TEXTURES, try TEXTURES.COM
If you need CLIP ART, try OPENCLIPART
If you need TEXTURES, try TEXTURES.COM
FINAL THINGS TO KEEP IN MIND
Because all of these programs are free, and most of them are open-source, their functionality is going to feel limited in places where the Adobe programs do not. For beginners or people looking for a no-frills approach to creation, this could actually be a good thing. For hard-boiled professionals, however, the limitations might hurt more.
There are also more than plenty of other, non-free alternatives that might better suit the needs of hardcore users. Clip Studio Paint has become an overnight sensation for artists and there are tons of InDesign clones out there that, while not exactly cheap, are still cheaper than Adobe’s absurd $50 a month. Plus, many of these alternatives are a simple, one-time payment. As software should be.
But please don’t discount the power of these free programs! While there might be limitations, open-source programs like Paint.NET offer TONS of customization through plug-ins, and it’s entirely possible to build yourself a powerful program using the scaffolding of these basic free ones this way. The reason I don’t use GIMP is that I’ve beefed Paint.NET up so much I don’t need it. Also, GIMP takes 900 years to open and Paint.NET does not. Priorities.
In the wake of this price hike crisis, creators feel rightfully attacked. People want to know: What is it going to take to show Adobe that this kind of behavior isn’t okay?
The answer is short and simple: They need to lose money over it. The only time a company as big as Adobe cares about their customers is when they’re hemorrhaging funds and can’t figure out why. As my late uncle always used to say: Money talks. Bullshit walks.
Using these free or cheaper programs and encouraging other people—especially professionals—to also use them will hit Adobe right where they’ll feel it most: In the wallet. Plus, it’ll help support small-time developers, which increases competition, which might make room for something better than Adobe to emerge. Or it’ll at least pressure Adobe into keeping their prices fair.
The only way to fix the system is to tear it down by its foundations. Scurry from Adobe like cockroaches in the light. Go download free programs. Create in spite of Adobe saying you can’t without ponying up your life savings first. Take immense satisfaction in knowing that, every time you open Blender or DaVinci Resolve, you’re giving Adobe a big fat finger to their greedy faces.
Now get out there and create, you lovely bastards.
you saved my life jdhskhxsk
ReplyDeleteI'm glad I could help! Never stop creating!!!
DeleteThere is also GravityDesigner for vectors!
ReplyDeleteUnpopular opinion: prices increase as years go by. Inflation. Roughly 2% per year.
ReplyDeleteDoes this suck? Yeah, but no company would survive (let alone grow) by charging the same price they did in the past. You, as a creative, can't survive by charging the same rate year after year.
Couple that with the fact that many folks still resent the OpEx vs CapEx model (newsflash: it's NOT going away for software) and yeah, outrage.
"Why don't Apple and Blackmagic do this?" Their NLE software is a loss leader to get folks to buy their hardware (nevermind that Apple has OpEx/monthly software options outside of NLEs as well). Software companies like Adobe don't have that luxury. If Adobe can stay in the financial 'pocket' - e.g. increment slowly, they can avoid a mass exodus and retain their base.
It's not rainbows and unicorns, but it's not unexpected, and not outrage-able nor criminal.
You're right! Your opinion is unpopular. Fuck Adobe. Thanks for reading. <3
DeleteThe price has almost doubled since 2014 Michael. That's a bit higher than 2% per year
DeleteCorrection: it has in fact doubled since 2014 and is now going even further than that.
DeleteLets make sure we're comparing apples to apples:
DeleteWhen CC launched, it was $49.99 for ALL apps (not single apps, not business, not enterprise/teams, not Edu.)
4 years later - in April 2018: All apps pricing (non business/enterprise/teams/Edu)- increase from $49.99 to 52.99. That's $3 (U.S.)
2019: *Gasp*! Still true!
What many people here are conflating is:
Monthly vs yearly (and thus monthly cost goes down)
Individuals vs business, enterprise, and Edu.
You can see the pricing changes here: https://helpx.adobe.com/x-productkb/policy-pricing/subscription-price-increase.html
DeleteMeanwhile, these other companies, such as Clip Studio, are much much cheaper than Adobe.
DeleteI would think a company pulling in $7B dollars in revenue and $1.69B in net income doesn't need to hike their already ridiculously high prices to survive, while Celsys sells Clip Studio at $50 for the standard version and hasn't changed the price since 2013.
I should add that the price for Clip Studio has probably been $50 longer than that. That's just based on how far back the purchase page goes on the WayBack machine.
DeleteActually most creatives have been unable to raise prices for the last 20 years.
DeleteIf inflation drives the prices 2% up per year, and Adobe raises the price of it's services by.. what is it, 22.5%, let's say not every year, but every two years, can you see where this will be in 10 years? Roughly over 130usd/month, at this rate. A 2% inflation on the 49usd would get us to 60usd. But of course you'll find that normal. And you would keep the pace and charge customers more, way more than adobe, and you'll be a winner. But, of course, when everybody's charging more, this means inflation, and the big fishes survive, and the small ones give up and wonder what happened, the theory was great.
DeleteThis is really awesome!
ReplyDeleteI just had one question about a group of these. The FAQ’s on the websites weren’t always clear, but do any of these have an equivalent to the “paint” function in adobe after effects?
Also, the Paint.NET hyperlink you have accidentally redirects to some random “Warren Paint” website.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.getpaint.net/ is the correct URL.
DeleteI finally got around to fixing this. My bad!
DeleteHi, another free option for video editing is VSDC Free Video Editor. I paid $15 for the pro licence to get more options like hardware rendering, but it's a pretty powerful program with lots of options.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.videosoftdev.com/free-video-editor
Hi, I feel like your recommendation of paint.net isn't appropriate for Lightroom. I use LR to mass develop RAW photos and keep my albums properly organized, maybe Darktable (https://www.darktable.org) would be a better alternative?
ReplyDeleteOh, awesome! I'm adding Darktable to the Lightroom alternatives, tysm!
DeleteAlso try LightZone project: http://lightzoneproject.org/ tutorials: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGob3KtUcRJqz-GwA5Owbdg/videos
DeleteAnother option for web coding is Brackets. www(dot)brackets(dot)io
ReplyDeleteOpen source and light-weight, with great functionality, documentation, support, and community. No, I'm not a company rep 😆
I don't code web stuff often, but this is my go-to when I do.
What currency is this shit supposed to be?
ReplyDeleteI'm pretty sure free is free in every currency, buddy.
DeleteIt's Freemium but Desygner has an astounding array of drag and drop, point and click premade templates that pull from Pixabay (free for commercial use!) and attractive free fonts. I like the android apps marginally better than the website but both are surprisingly robust graphics editors with layering tools for simple graphics, like ads, book covers, logos and headers. Ignoring locked content there's still a ton of free layouts and the underlying editor and no rights issues to worry about.
ReplyDeleteMy MacBook Pro is 6 years old, purchased new to me (at least 2nd-hand) in 2015 when i was employed, had free access to Adobe and Apple via employer, and I then and especially now, need and appreciate these resources, and your post. Frankly, it matters not the hardware, socio-economic disenfranchisement affects us all.
ReplyDeleteThis is absolutely brilliant! A fantastic resource and I thank you for putting it together and for sharing.
ReplyDeletehttps://pixlr.com/editor/ I have had luck using this
ReplyDeletePeople are also recommending Affinity Photo and Affiinity Designer as a good replacement for Photoshop with all the features, can open PSDs, brush packs, and focus stacking
ReplyDeleteKrita, Medibang and FireAlpaca are all free for drawing and painting. Krita especially looks and acts a lot like Photoshop. All 100% free 👍
ReplyDeleteI need an alternative to Adobe Acrobat for the sole purpose of produce the highest resolution PDF files. I know I can create a PDF straight from Word (it's a book) but I also know the res has a limit of 220dpi. Thoughts on a free tool I can use to do that?
ReplyDeleteA cursory Google search turned up PDFcreator and Bullzip. Maybe look into those to see if they can do what you need?
DeleteInstead of After Effects, use: HitFilm Express for 3D compositing - For FREE:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLj6XzcqwRpN5f86p11cuxbTpEGlAAXOpz
WonderlfuL list: notepad ++? wunderful beginnings, though. css 3.1 html 3.2
ReplyDeleteThis is great, thanks for using your valuable time to help others and stick it to Adobe. I'm still currently using Adobe but seriously want to drop them and their frickin price hikes as soon as I learn to use other viable software just as well. It's a tough call, because I actually love using Photoshop, Illustrator and Indesign, I think they're amazing programs..... that I can barely afford :(
ReplyDeleteFor drawing and painting: Mischief (http://madewithmischief.com) and Concepts (https://concepts.app/en/) can both be used for free and are quite good.
ReplyDeleteFOR BUILD WEBSITES, you can also use "Visual Studio Code" for FREE.
ReplyDeleteMemorability: A great and one of a kind logo configuration dependably stays in the psyche of potential customers' and turns out to be very exceptional. logo design service
ReplyDelete