Quote Originally Posted by handrawn View Post
you know Bones, some of us get fed up with the non-destructive way of doing things
That's gold! I'm printing that out and putting it on the noticeboard at work where all my colleagues can laugh their arses off over it. Being able to edit bitmaps non-destructively is the most amazing thing in the history of graphic design. It's what makes Photoshop "rubbish".
after the 100th time of having to make a bitmap copy to enable a feature to be applied to the current object's state [and not the underlying source object - bitmap tracer for example]
Can you explain in a little more detail, please, because I've never had any problems even remotely like that. I gave up on bitmap tracing decades ago - it never works in any application. And isn't it more than somewhat disingenuous to be using the nickname "handrawn" if you are using bitmap tracers? (Yes, I am having a bit of fun at your expense, don't take it personally, I do it to people all the time.)
explain to me how I can paint inside a clipview object in xara without having to edit inside which then loses sight of the rest of the workspace and therefore the clipviewed object's context
Window | Arrange Views or Window | Cascade both allow you to see multiple files at once, so you can still see "the rest of the workspace" while you work "inside". Mind you, I think the ability to work inside groups and clipviews is one of the best features ever added to Xara. It makes life so much easier. Anything else I can help you with?
Photoshop clip layers are excellent for this purpose...
Possibly but not worth the nightmare of everything else. Much easier to work in After Effects or Combustion, both of which have been built from the ground up to be completely non-destructive and have workflows an order of magnitude better than Photoshop.
Quote Originally Posted by handrawn View Post
yes and that is an additional step right...
Which would still be half as many steps in total as you'd have to do from start to finish in Photoshop.
since I dont need non distructive [because, dare I say it, I know what I am doing, and where I am going long term] it is yet another example of how the so called 'fast' progam is actually a drag
So it's just a toy to you? Because I have a job and clients and I don't know what a client is likely to want until I show them something. If they take a look and say "that background is a bit too blurry", it's kind of nice to be able to say "no problem, I'll just wind it back a tad... how's that?", instead of "oh, can you come back after lunch, when I've had a chance to re-do it from scratch?"