Design

The Top Ten Photoshop alternatives for drawing and painting – Car Body Design

Professional Car Design: Sketching a Super CarAutomotive seat design with Maya and ZBrush by David BentleyInterview with Luciano BovePhotoshop

Professional Car Design: Sketching a Super Car
Automotive seat design with Maya and ZBrush by David Bentley
Interview with Luciano Bove
Photoshop is the undisputed industry standard digital imaging solution, and is also widely used for sketching and painting. However there are many valid alternative specialized applications, either free or with an affordable price point.
In this round-up we’ll not report an exhaustive list – for that we refer you to our directory pages in the Design Software section.
Instead, we have compiled a list of proven alternative solutions, dividing them into two main categories (drawing/sketching and painting/illustration), even if most of them allow to do both drawings and paintings.

For pure line drawing and sketching, there are really some great alternatives that can be considered far better than Photoshop.
Features that set them apart include more responsive brush engines and drawing-focused features  – like for example custom rulersperspective guides and symmetry tools – that have been requested by many Photoshop users for a long time, with very little success so far.
Sketchbook Pro Car Design Sketch
(Mac, Windows, iOS, Android) Given its natural target towards product and industrial designers, Autodesk SketchBook Pro is widely adopted in these fields as a pure sketching and ideation tool and one of the best alternative choices to Photoshop for design sketching and basic digital rendering.
Sketchbook Pro perspective tool
The latest version also includes a perspective guide tool developed with the contribution of Scott Robertson
The current price for the desktop version is $65 for a non-subscription license and $24.99/year or $2.99/month for the subscription version. It is also available for iOS and on the Google Play Store.
link: autodesk.com – SketchBook Pro Tutorials
Clip Studio Paint tutorial by Kenjiro Kakimoto
Clip Studio Paint is a name relatively new for many designers. Initially targeted to comic and manga artists, it has been around for a several years now, but until recently it has been marketed outside Japan by Smith Micro under the name “Manga Studio”, which somehow limited its visibility and adoption by the general design public.
Clip Studio Paint offers a great natural drawing/painting feel with excellent responsiveness, a complete feature set and several specific drawing tools like a brush stroke smoothing function, an advanced perspective guide an several mirroring tools.
link: clipstudio.net
Mischief - Design Sketches by Spencer Nugent
Recently acquired by The Foundry – makers of MODO and Nuke, Mischief is a drawing/sketching app based on the Adaptively Sampled Distance Fields (ADFs) technology, which enables to draw on an infinite canvas with unlimited zooming capabilities and vector-like drawing quality.

It is available in a free lite version and a commercial version – with a very affordable price point. While it doesn’t provide advanced sketching tools, it’s really worth a try as a digital replacement for the traditional sketchbook.
link: madewithmischief.com
The applications listed below provide a wider range of brushes and effects that allow to create complex digital paintings and illustrations. Most of them can also be used for simple line drawings.
Krita user interface
(Windows, Linux) Krita is developed with a specific focus on digital artists and includes a high quality brush engine and a growing set of features, including the ability to work with both bitmap and vector illustration.
Krita brush engine Krita symmetry tool
Krita features an advanced brush editor and a symmetry drawing tool
It is free and distributed under GNU General Public License. It is one of the best free alternatives for Windows and Linux users – an experimental Mac version exists but it’s not on par with the others.
link: krita.org
ArtRage 4 - Interface
(Mac OSX, Windows, iOS, Android) Developed by Ambient Design, ArtRage is a software specifically designed to simulate traditional media and characterized by an affordable price tag and an interesting feature set, including a flexible stencil system with rulers and french curves and a symmetry drawing tool.
ArtRage 4 - Symmetry ArtRage 4 - Watercolor tools
A distinctive feature is the original user interface, optimized for pen tablets. It is also available as a mobile app for iOS (iPad and iPhone) and Android.
link: www.artrage.com
Procreate iPad app screenshot
(iOS) Procreate by Savage Interactive is the only application on this list which runs exclusively on mobile devices, but for its stroke engine responsiveness and brush quality, it undoubtedly deserves a mention.
Procreate iPad app screenshot
Thanks to Procreate, many designers decided to completely switch to the iPad for exploring ideas and making initial sketches or even more refined illustrations.
link: procreate.si
Verve Painter screenshot
(Windows) Verve Painter is a lightweight, free experimental application with a GL-based shader paint engine that simulates real fluid dynamics. Despite its limited features set, and the fact that it’s not suitable for line drawing, it’s a really interesting tool that’s worth exploring for creating original effects.

link: taron.de
Particle Brush Palettes
When speaking about digital painting it’s difficult not to mention Painter, one of the first and most established applications of this kind, first released in 1990 – one year earlier than Photoshop.
The 2015 version introduces a number of advanced tools, like a particles system that allows to simulate certain analogue media or to create special digital effects.
Its price point cannot be considered “affordable”, however some of its advanced features make it a must-have tool for many artists specialized in digital painting – especially those who want to emulate natural media. It is also available in a cheaper, lite version called Painter Essentials.
link: painterartist.com
MyPaint screenshots
(Windows and GNU/Linux) MyPaint is another open-source software targeted to digital painters.
link: mypaint.intilinux.com
Paint Tool SAI User Interface
(Windows) SAI or Easy PaintTool SAI is another Japanese lightweight painting software, first released in 2004 and mainly targeted to comic and manga artists. It is relatively simple and intuitive.
link: systemax.jp
 
So, what is your favorite sketching/painting software? Let us know in the comments!
 
As our Facebook subscribers suggested, we are adding another drawing software entry:

(Windows and Mac OSX) Rebelle is a dedicated app that enables to create realistic wet and dry media artwork. It features real-world dynamic simulation of fluid flow, color blending, wet diffusion, and drying.
link: rebelle.escapemotions.com
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I used to work with Sketchbook Pro, but it never really satisfied my needs… everything feels too digital… until I discovered PaintTool SAI. As mentioned above, the software is simple, intuitive and lightweight, but really, that’s all you need- it’s just like sketching on paper. The brushes feels all-round natural and highly responsive. I Never looked back.
Check out my example here: sketchmechanic.com 😀
It depends on your style of rendering my friend, concerning sketchbook pro it’s offering a very real feeling especially when it comes to markers, it has the real tones of the cupic set. Generally It’s more convenient for the russian and italian style of rendering, plus it consumes the pc way less than photoshop, reason why some designers prefer it than photoshop if they are not using mac.
Artrage is not offering the same quality, Corel is abit complicated for a creative flowless sketching and consumes much of RAM, and not sure about the rest of the list.
But again it all depends on your style and which more convenient to it.
Painter is definitely the best software! I found it a bit over priced so I used alternatives until I found some discounts here http://www.painterartist.com/en/pages/coupons/ and got it in a price that was in my budget. And I am glad I did, It’s the best software in my opinion!
I started using Clip studio paint earlier this year. The program is really user-friendly, it was really easy to get a flow down quickly after I started using it. I had only used Photoshop for illustration before that. I don’t think you have to be concerned about it taking a lot of time to learn if you switched.
CSP focuses solely on art/illustration, so does not have all the photo editing tools that PS does (such as liquify tool, spot healing etc). If you are interested in making webtoon/manga/comics CSP is great for that too.
CSP’s brush tool is pressure sensitive and thus using a drawing tablet here is very helpful. I personally use a XP-Pen Artist Pro 16 pen display monitor. It is very nice and the pen is great and supports pressure sensitivity and tilt.
 
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