MacFormat Magazine - Nov 01
Debate: The Big One.
Expert's View
If you produce graphics you either use Illustrator or Freehand,
and both packages have their die-hard fans. So which is best?
We ask a panel of design experts for their views.
Sarah Mowatt (PR Manager Macromedia
UK):
Lawrence, how long have you been using Freehand? And what version
are you using now?
Lawrence Zeegen:
Gosh, I starting using it on and off at version 5 but really went
over to it fully at 7. I now use 9 but am moving over to 10 really
soon when my new G4 Powerbook arrives. Just to see how OSX behaves
with it!
Ed Haynes (Deputy Editor MacFormat):
Why did you move from Illustrator to Freehand?
Lawrence Zeegen:
I guess that after starting with Illustrator and then trying Freehand
it just seemed more user-friendly, the interface just felt more
comfortable. I guess I did worry about leaving Adobe as I wanted
to co-exist with Photoshop, which I still do, of course!
Ed Haynes:
Lawrence, do you find the interface changes a problem between
Adobe and Macromedia products?
Lawrence Zeegen:
Not really. The way I use Photoshop and Freehand just works as
I need it. Freehand seems to cope well importing images from Photoshop,
once you get to grips with file formats, etc. I guess that I am
surprised that Macromedia has not tried to challenge Photoshop!
Ed Haynes:
What benefits did you initially see from Freehand. Miss anything
in Illustrator?
Lawrence Zeegen:
The way I use Freehand means that some of the grumbles others
have had of Freehand don't upset me. I hear that there are more
customisable tools in Illustrator but I get by.
I think that most illustrators are so afraid of technology, generally,
that they daren't leave what they know - that is why so many sit
on previous versions and use older Mac OSs.
Martin (Macromedia Technical Support):
What were the grumbles that the others had, in your experience?
Lawrence Zeegen:
Grumbles... I think that much of the upset has been about the
perception of the two products rather than real issues about how
the two compare. When Freehand went through a redesign at version
8 it looked fresher and, I think, started to appeal to designers
as well as more aware illustrators... I think that it is worth
mentioning that the links with Photoshop that Illustrator has
have been pipped to the post by Freehand's obvious links to Flash.
Ed Haynes:
How do you think the feature set between the two packages differs?
Freehand offers multi-page documents and has been known for better
text handling, but Illustrator has features like the gradient
mesh fill.
Lawrence Zeegen:
The multi-page option is great for designers, less so for illustrators
as they tend to work on one image at a time. My sense is that
Freehand is used by designers as more than just a vector illustration
package. More traditional illustrators are using Illustrator!
Ed Haynes:
Is closer integration with the web the way forward for the toolset
or does this further alienate the traditional print designer,
do you think?
Lawrence Zeegen:
I would like to see the easy options in Freehand for saving to
JPEG that can be used by my clients. I email all of my artwork
and have to convert to Photoshop for them - a pain! Traditional
designers want the transition to newer media made good and simple
and Freehand is doing that...
© www.zeegen.com

