Now, what I like you may not but based on my experience Affinity Revolution is a good little company to deal with. I took his free course removing shadows and it was straight and to the point. But, my personal feeling is I could take Erza at his word. I have never had to use their refund policy. I have asked Erza questions through his website and he has always responded pretty prompt. On the page If you scroll down you will see a heading of "What if I am unhappy with the course?" and the text there explains in plain terms their refund policy. I took their Basic Course early on when I started using Affinity Photo and it was enough to get me started when I took their course and watched the free Affinity Photo videos from Serif. Their offers for free training I have found to be very reliable. I have contacted them through the e-mail address I found by clicking on the "Contact" link at the top of their web page. The link failed to load and I attempted to contact this training company, but could find no information, so if anyone knows how to contact them I would appreciate the information otherwise I must conclude that their free offers are worthless. This company Affinity Revolution put a YouTube video out for Affinity Photo 1.8 with a link to free forms below it. They are easy to follow and many explain the background theory of many of the tools, making their use more clear.ĮXCELLENT resource, excellent posting. There are for example, very many 4-5 minute videos on the use of Curves and Selection tools that a casual user might never discover. These focus on many of the smaller details of the software, both simple and advanced. I would also like to point people to and recommend the many short and excellent videos on YouTube from InAffinity ( ). So the information in Affinity Revolution videos is available free from other sources, but I still feel they were very useful in getting started with Affinity Photo. Earlier this month, Ezra offered the core of his video course in a long pdf book form, making looking up the steps of a task even easier. I was happy supporting him because he seemed like a very nice man. Ezra speaks very distinctly and clearly on his videos. A quick look at his video was easier than rewatching the longer (but still excellent) ones from Serif. Ezra's video chapters are much shorter and are focused on specific tasks so they were very useful when I could not remember how to accomplish something. I later did purchase the course package from Affinity Revolution (Ezra Anderson) and found they did complement the Serif videos nicely. When I first purchased Affinity Photo several years ago, I proceeded to sit through many of the Serif produced free videos and became oriented to the software. Additionally, a bookmark that was provided by another Retouching forum contributor: Not all specifically designed around Affinity Photo, but in general, most Photoshop tutorials can be adapted for use with AP.Ī quick note - the page I pointed to has 200+ tutorial videos all based on AP, not photoshop or some other application.Īnd, I have phil from seattle's Serif link bookmarked. There are a plethora of video tutorials that are free. Probably a personal choice if one is looking into actually paying for instruction, but in my opinion, I'd not be inclined to pay the $30. I found this tutorial comparing Adobe Illustrator to Affinity Designer, produced by Ezra Anderson: Īs the previous poster infers, this is likely the style in which the paid tutorials are made. well, "Black Friday recently", I was considering the purchase of Affinity Designer.
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