![]() As well as integrating with Affinity Designer and Affinity Publisher. I have 3 months to decide if I want to keep it.Click to expand.Although there is some (maybe considerable) overlap, they are really two different tools aimed at doing two different things.Īffinity Photo is a pixel editor and can do far more sophisticated editing than C1, in terms of layers, cloning/healing, composites, Panos HDR, stacking and "fixing" things. I went for the Affinity 1.9.1 version from the web store and not the Mac App Store. As a result, I decided to re-purchase Affinity Photo from the web during their latest sale, even knowing that when v2.0 eventually comes out it will be a paid upgrade. ![]() I suspect that Affinity's decision give us the option to purchase Affinity Photo from the website was due to the problems between the old Photoshop plugin interface and the App Store sandbox restrictions. While testing the Affinity Photo 1.9 beta I was not surprised to discover that these plugins work with the web version of the 1.9 beta. ![]() Note the plugins impacted have never been "officially" supported by Affinity (the plugin preferences list the compatibility status as "Unknown"). With the latest macOS updates with stricter sandbox rules for App Store Apps, some of my older Photoshop plugins stopped working forcing me to use them as stand-alone applications rather than launching them from the Affinity Filters menu. I bought it from the Mac App Store as that was the only option at the time. I have been using Affinity Photo since v 1.0 was released. They have no immediate plans for an Affinity 2.0 upgrade. I could be mistaken but I thought the developer posts in DPR? I will send Serif email. ![]()
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