![]() ![]() ![]() For ten bucks a month it is worth it to me to stick with it. If you are handy with PS you might like Affinity, but I gave up and went back to PS since I already invested the time to learn the basics. After two days I got tired of messing with it, watching tutorials and Youtube videos, I got nothing but weird results, down a blind alley repeatedly. I was just looking for something simpler, so I bought Affinity Photo. I don't plan to open a booth at an Art Fair. I use it all the time to stack over 250 macro shots at a time.Īt 76, I purchased Photoshop and with some effort I manage to get basic decent astro photos, good enough for me. Also if you have a desire to stack macro photo files, Affinity photo makes it very easy to process a lot of large files in short time. Affinity Photo has no problem working with the 32 bit autosave file. If you are using DeepSky Stacker and want to work with the autosave file it creates, photoshop will choke on it. ![]() I can't remember if I tried Gradient XTerminator or not.Īffinity Photo will do one thing that Photoshop can't-work with 32 bit file. Affinity will run some Photoshop plugins, but did not seem to work with AstraImage last time I tried it. At the moment I don't remember what specific things you can't do in Affinity Photo, but I don't recall there being anything that would limit your ability to use it for astrophotography. Affinity Photo appears to do at least 90% of what you can do with Photoshop, at a much lower cost and with similar interface, including layers and (IIRC) channels. I have both Photoshop (older CS6 version) and Affinity Photo. But don't take my word for it, I mostly process science images and not astrophotos. I sprung for PixInsight for most astrophoto processing. But that is for regular photography and putting some final touches on DSLR astrophotos. I also use Lightroom (stand alone version) for some tasks. However, this is restricted to the platform for which you purchased the software. Read on for more details.Įach license gives you the right to install the product that you purchased (Affinity Photo for Windows, for example) on as many computers as you (the buyer) own and control. Each gives you a different level of access. You can buy the app separately, or you can buy the Affinity Universal License. However, there is a bit more nuance to the answer, as it depends on which license you have chosen. so in this case same licence can work for both laptop?Īffinity Photo can be installed on as many computers as you own as an individual, or on one multi-user computer, as a commercial entity. I have bought licence of affinity, and i work from my personal office in 1 laptop and from my home other laptop, but its only by me, and with same login ID. I switched from Adobe in part because of their increasingly restrictive licensing, and I am moving students to Serif platforms as well. Have a couple of kids home thanks to coronavirus, and being able to load Designer on their computers and let them learn and be creative is awesome, and a good long-term strategy on your part. Just a thank you for a sane licencing agreement. I just want to make sure that the work we create for our clients will be free of any copyright problems.Ĭan i download affinity photo on two computers But if my son uses the second computer that I own to complete projects for clients then I will have to purchase a second license? I have a home-based business and my son will soon be working with me and we will be using two separate computers in the same room. If I understand both of you correctly this means that I can install Affinity on my computer and use it for business purposes. I did a search on the subject but it didn't find anything. I've been using Affinity Photo on the same computer for a couple of years and would like to install it on a second computer, thus having two to use. ![]()
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