Archive for: paint

FlockDraw: Free Seamless Realtime Collaborative Drawing Tool

Sometimes Im terrible at explaining my ideas, so why not give it go through the medium of Art! FlockDraw is an easy to use online whiteboard with all the tools you need to quickly, collaboratively sketch your next big idea and share it with the world.

Simply click the “Start Drawing” button on FlockDraw’s homepage, and a whiteboard opens up in your browser. Use the set of tools in the sidebar to create lines, circles, text, or freehand drawings in any combination of the seven available colors. A unique URL is assigned to each drawing so you can invite others to join and draw with you in real-time.

Beyond the whole fun-to-use aspect, FlockDraw has plenty of useful real-world applications—from remote teams working together on projects to parents who want to doodle online with their kids as a way to reconnect while traveling. Give FlockDraw a try and let us know in the comments how you’d use this neat web app.

flockdraw

Top 8 Free Alternatives to Adobe Photoshop

Adobe has some of the most expensive and best product solution in the world, but of course they come at a price. Below are the best 8 free solutions that challenge the Adobe Photoshop program.

1. GIMP

GIMP stands for “GNU image manipulation program”, and it is one of the oldest and most well known alternatives to Photoshop in existence. Although it doesn’t quite have all of them, you’ll find most of the features included in Photoshop somewhere in GIMP. GIMP is cross platform and supported by a large community.

If just having the feature set isn’t enough for you, there is an alternative based on GIMP known as GIMPShop. It’s the same as GIMP, except the layout has been structured as close to Photoshop as possible, so anyone making the transition should still feel right at home.

GIMP - screen shot.

2. Krita

Krita has been lauded for ease of use and won the Akademy Award for Best Application in 2006. Part of the Koffice suite for Linux, Krita is slightly less powerful than both Photoshop and GIMP, but does contain some unique features.

Krita - screen shot.

3. Paint.NET

Paint.NET has grown out of a simple replacement for the well known MSPaint into a fully featured open source image editor with a wide support base. You’ll need Windows to run Paint.NET.

Paint.NET - screen shot.

4. ChocoFlop

ChocoFlop is a design application designed exclusively for Mac, optimized for Mac architecture. It’s quick and fairly well featured. This program won’t always be free, but until a stable version is released (it’s currently in beta) they are allowing free use. The program works pretty well as is, and if you’re the type who doesn’t mind an occasional bug it’s certainly worth a look.

ChocoFlop - screen shot.

5. Cinepaint

Cinepaint is designed primarily for video often used to make animated feature films by major studios, but it is also a great image editor capable of high fidelity 32 bit color. Currently there is no stable version for Windows.

Cinepaint - screen shot.

6. Pixia

Pixia was originally designed in Japanese but English versions now exist for this rich editor. Although the original focus was on anime/manga, it is a very capable editor in general. Some of the features are a little counter intuitive, but there are plenty of English tutorials available now if you want to give it a shot. The website seems to have changed recently, so be sure to use our link if you don’t want a Japanese error message. Pixia works for Windows.

Pixia - screen shot.

7. Pixen

Pixen is designed as a pixel artist’s dream, but has expanded into a smooth and well featured overall editor. It’s definitely best at animation though, if that’s your style. Pixen is Mac (10.4x or later) only.

Pixen - screen shot.

8. Picnik

Picnik is a web based photo editor that has recently taken off due to a partnership with Flickr. It has all the basic features plus a few advanced ones like layers and special effects. It is cross platform since you only need a browser.

Picnik - screen shot.