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Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
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Developer Flying Meat has released an update to its popular Photoshop alternative Acorn, bringing it to version 4.0 and adding an improved user interface, speed upgrades, non-destructive filters, multiple layer selection and more.

acorn4.png
The developer claims that the new version of Acorn is "a lot faster than its predecessors" in a variety of ways, including applying filters and selections and working with large images. New features like non-destructive filters also improve workflow speed, allowing users to try filter combinations without overwriting the original image data.
Non-Destructive Filters

Layer styles and filters are now merged together into a happy new UI. Chain filters together to create endless combinations of unique effects knowing you can always change your mind later on.
Non-destructive filters aren't the only new part of Acorn, as the entire program has received a "new coat of paint" while the tools palette has been split off into its own window and a new filter HUD, called Merlin HUD, has been added, which will allow users to manipulate the radii and center points of their filters on the canvas.

Acorn 4, which debuted in 2007 with the goal of "simplicity", is available on Flying Meat's website for $29.99 until the end of May.

Article Link: Acorn 4 Image Editor Adds Improved Speed, Enhanced User Interface and More
 

AdeFowler

macrumors 68020
Aug 27, 2004
2,317
361
England
A great looking app for the price and I wish the developers well, but until it has CMYK support it cannot be considered as a true Photoshop alternative. That’s not me being snobbish, it’s just a fact of life for a huge percentage of Photoshop users.
 

nagromme

macrumors G5
May 2, 2002
12,546
1,196
I don't know whether Acorn is it (maybe I need a suite of several apps, plus my old CS3), but I'm definitely looking to escape Adobe's stranglehold somehow! Endless bugs, endless payment... I'm willing to go through considerable aggravation (and pay considerable money) to get something better quality than Photoshop. Photoshop is feature-packed, but as of CS6 has become a bloated, buggy mess--and some bugs go unpatched for years. I waste so many hours fighting them, and for a freelancer, time is not free!
 
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jayducharme

macrumors 601
Jun 22, 2006
4,516
5,935
The thick of it
What's the difference between this and Pixelmator? I've used the latter and found it even less intuitive than Photoshop for some tasks.

Another option for Mac users who don't need all of Photoshop's functionality is Seashore, which is built on GIMP's engine.
 

technopimp

macrumors 6502a
Aug 12, 2009
645
219
What's the difference between this and Pixelmator? I've used the latter and found it even less intuitive than Photoshop for some tasks.

Another option for Mac users who don't need all of Photoshop's functionality is Seashore, which is built on GIMP's engine.

I'd be interested as well, as I too find Pixelmator is often frustratingly counter-intuitive-not to mention highly unstable.
 

g-7

macrumors 6502
Feb 14, 2006
403
100
Poland
What's the difference between this and Pixelmator?

One click drop shadow. I'm purchasing right now.

Yes, I know how to make a shadow by hand, but honestly all this layer copying, blurring and copying again just to get a shadow in Pixelmator is quite annoying.
 

estorstenson

macrumors member
Jan 30, 2013
38
3
I don't use photoshop, but since Adobe acquired Fireworks, it's gone downhill. Crashes galore...I think they are worse than Oracle. The worst thing is, as soon as they do come up with CMYK or whatever feature your preferred Adobe product has that you won't switch for, Adobe will buy it and then let it die.
 

gnurf

macrumors member
Apr 25, 2011
84
4
A great looking app for the price and I wish the developers well, but until it has CMYK support it cannot be considered as a true Photoshop alternative. That’s not me being snobbish, it’s just a fact of life for a huge percentage of Photoshop users.

I don't think it's meant to compete with Photoshop, but Photoshop Elements. From what I've read Elements doesn't support CMYK either. If Acorn got that it would make an awful lot of people happy, though, including me :)
 

g-7

macrumors 6502
Feb 14, 2006
403
100
Poland
Oops. Back to Pixelmator for me. In Acorn, there is no way to transform/resize several shapes together, when they are on different layers. You may only modify one layer at a time.

Good bye, Acorn. You seemed so great at the first sight.
 

I WAS the one

macrumors 6502a
May 16, 2006
867
58
Orlando, FL
I'd be interested as well, as I too find Pixelmator is often frustratingly counter-intuitive-not to mention highly unstable.

Unstable? I've been using Pixelmator for a while and to this date Pixelmator works great. I gotbit running on an 2007 iMac 24 core 2 extreme with maxed ram.
 

Albright

macrumors regular
Aug 23, 2011
130
299
I agree with Ade. Without CMYK (and control over total ink coverage), no program is an adequate substitute for Photoshop.

Okay, it won't work for you. I'm a web developer, so for me, CMYK images are a bug, not a feature - and Acorn works quite well for me as a Photoshop replacement. (On the other hand, I would love to see more support for indexed color images, but it's not a dealbreaker.)

Anyone know if there is a further discounted price for users of version 3-3.5?

The web site says the $30 price is "for everybody." I bought my copy through the App Store, which doesn't support upgrade discounts, so that might be a part of that. At any rate, I don't think $30 is unreasonable for a program like this if you do a fair bit of image editing and want something more Mac-friendly than GIMP.

What's the difference between this and Pixelmator? I've used the latter and found it even less intuitive than Photoshop for some tasks.

In my opinion, Acorn's interface is more sane. Pixelmator seemed to be unnecessarily flashy and hip. Acorn also has a "Web Export" feature which isn't quite as useful as Photoshop's "Save for Web" but is still better than just "Save As…". A lot of people swear by Pixlemator, though, and it is cheaper. Acorn has a demo available on their site, so you can give it a try

At any rate, I'm glad to see more support for layer styles and other non-destructive stuff. I think those things are very useful, and an area where Photoshop held a big lead for a long time. I haven't upgraded yet, but I will.
 

I WAS the one

macrumors 6502a
May 16, 2006
867
58
Orlando, FL
One click drop shadow. I'm purchasing right now.

Yes, I know how to make a shadow by hand, but honestly all this layer copying, blurring and copying again just to get a shadow in Pixelmator is quite annoying.

Shadows are easy with Pixelmator... It seems you just want to get results the Adobe way. Go search for Quark Filters and install them and you will see how easy to do shadows is with Pixelmator. Yes. The old filters works great. Please master an app before bashing it. I own Phostoshop, Pixelmator and Acorn. Al of them are great, Photoshop is expensive that's why Pixelmator is my next photo editing app, Acorn is cool but I return to Pixelmator everytime.

And about the crying on CMYK pixelmator also works with thar too. Is a basic feature now but it will be better on every update.
 

g-7

macrumors 6502
Feb 14, 2006
403
100
Poland
Shadows are easy with Pixelmator... It seems you just want to get results the Adobe way. Go search for Quark Filters and install them and you will see how easy to do shadows is with Pixelmator.

Been there, tried that. I still have two filters, one of them displays completely garbled preview (so I cannot see the way the shadow is going to look like), the other does not display any preview at all. Without the preview, it is still better for me to make shadows the "duplicate-fill-blur" way. Maybe you know a working filter?

And I'm not bashing Pixelmator. Let's put it that way: using Pixelmator, I can still make that drop shadow effect by hand, although not as fast as in Photoshop. Using Acorn, I just cannot transform several layers simultaneously, and there seem to be no way around this, other than transforming each layer one by one.
 

gtcaz

macrumors newbie
Nov 15, 2007
9
0
In my opinion, Acorn's interface is more sane. Pixelmator seemed to be unnecessarily flashy and hip. Acorn also has a "Web Export" feature which isn't quite as useful as Photoshop's "Save for Web" but is still better than just "Save As…". A lot of people swear by Pixlemator, though, and it is cheaper. Acorn has a demo available on their site, so you can give it a try

From the Pixelmator website:

Save for Web

The powerful web tools in Pixelmator let you prepare and export individual images or complex page layouts for the web with minimal effort.

I use it all the time.
 

CrickettGrrrl

macrumors 6502a
Feb 10, 2012
985
274
B'more or Less
Been there, tried that. I still have two filters, one of them displays completely garbled preview (so I cannot see the way the shadow is going to look like), the other does not display any preview at all. Without the preview, it is still better for me to make shadows the "duplicate-fill-blur" way. Maybe you know a working filter?

And I'm not bashing Pixelmator. Let's put it that way: using Pixelmator, I can still make that drop shadow effect by hand, although not as fast as in Photoshop. Using Acorn, I just cannot transform several layers simultaneously, and there seem to be no way around this, other than transforming each layer one by one.

You have to download Quartz Composer, use it to open the Quartz filters that are garbled or where preview doesn't work (I had something like 28 to change so I know the drill now :p) --then open the Parameters tab --then select the default Preview image icon and delete it. I spent Saturday afternoon doing this based on the instructions on the following link and all the filters that were buggy after the Cherry update are working again.
http://support.pixelmator.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=3429&start=50
 

I WAS the one

macrumors 6502a
May 16, 2006
867
58
Orlando, FL
Been there, tried that. I still have two filters, one of them displays completely garbled preview (so I cannot see the way the shadow is going to look like), the other does not display any preview at all. Without the preview, it is still better for me to make shadows the "duplicate-fill-blur" way. Maybe you know a working filter?

And I'm not bashing Pixelmator. Let's put it that way: using Pixelmator, I can still make that drop shadow effect by hand, although not as fast as in Photoshop. Using Acorn, I just cannot transform several layers simultaneously, and there seem to be no way around this, other than transforming each layer one by one.

oh... next time update your filters with Xcode. is easy.
 

Michaelgtrusa

macrumors 604
Oct 13, 2008
7,900
1,821
Glad to hear it ---by the way, Pixelmator 2.2 was just released a little over an hour ago so go download it! (I haven't checked whether my Quartz filters still work, but there are lots of new things to play with --Yay!) :)

Are your filters third party?
 

CrickettGrrrl

macrumors 6502a
Feb 10, 2012
985
274
B'more or Less
Are your filters third party?

Yes, some had links on the Pixelmator community site and I got another set from the PXM-tuts.com site, an early post I think.

Two pages on this link "User-Created Quartz Filters":
http://support.pixelmator.com/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=3429

I can't find the specific post on PXM-tuts.com right now, have to run, but there are other freebies as well. :)

----------------------

Here's a Belight filter pack which works with Pixelmator and Acorn, etc.:
http://belightcommunity.free.fr/
 
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