No Clue...Wedding invitations with Illustrations

LisaD

New Member
Hello,

I've been making home made invites. I would now like to have printed illustrations on some of my designs. Can you recommend the best software to use to design?

Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks,
Lisa
 
The Professional option would be Adobe Illustrator coupled with a drawing tablet. But with illustrator costing in excess of £500 and a decent drawing tablet in the hundreds too, it all depends how serious you are about wanting to do this. There are freeware options out there but I know nothing about them.

You would also need to factor in a printer capable of printing onto heavyweight papers (assuming you're cards aren't made from 100gsm copy paper?).
 
Hi Lisa,

What software are you currently using and what's your budget?

Peter

PS Welcome!


Hi Peter,

Thanks for your response. The Fonts on Microsoft Office have been fine up until now. I have not used any professional software for illustrations before. My budget is between £300-£500 to spend perhaps 2 different types of software. Does that sound reasonable in your experience?

Lisa
 
Big Dave,

Thanks!! I'd be happy to spend that much on Illustrator. Can you recommend a drawing tablet also?

I'm taking this MEGA seriously. It's pretty much been a hobby and favours for people (with small cost involved) up until now but I'd like to seriously make a go of it now.

With respect to printing. I'd also like to consider printing myself, I haven't been able to afford the equipment up till now and it seemed cheaper just to use a local printers.

Many thanks for your advice. This forum is great, some really helpful replies :)
 
Illustrator CS6

I've just been doing some research on which version of Illustrator to purchase. CS6 is most recent right? Does anyone have experience of using it?

It seems to have some fantastic features. I'm quite excited about this :)
 
My other half is in the process of setting up a business producing bespoke event stationery so I know where you're starting from. Luckily she's got 5+ years graphic design experience and software knowledge so it's one less hurdle to jump.

• CS6 is the most recent illustrator. I use it at home and it's by far my favorite edition so far (I've been using it since CS1). The illustrator basics are quite easy to learn and Adobe's Lynda tutorials are certainly something worse looking at! I believe CS6 is now the only version Adobe sell (older editions are available second hand but you'd need to know the serial nº hasn't been used to upgrade as it won't be valid anymore).

• I use a Wacom Bamboo and it's a great entry level tablet but I'd recommend researching the alternatives as the market is pretty huge.

• We've just bought an Epson printer (cant remember the model number) which seems to handle thicker papers pretty well but the print onto thicker paper looks a little bit grainy. I can see it being replaced within 12 months. Using local/trusted print firms is likely to be your only option for some things but will mean your unit price will increase. It's also worth making friends with someone who owns a hot foil press for the really special jobs which include golds, sliver etc..
 
If you have the funds and the ambition to learn Illustrator, then that is a great choice. The Wacom Bamboo I would also count as essential, as even if you're not using it to draw, its still a really great bit of kit to have for manipulating and colouring illustrations. Printing wise, you can do it yourself, but for the paper and the printer you would need for top of the range professional results (as a lot of brides to be expect!) you'd probably be better using your local printers, at least for the beginning.

Best of luck with it!
 
If you're taking it seriously, definitely go for Adobe Illustrator. You don't 'need' a tablet, but if you want to buy one also, they aren't that expensive anyway.

I learned to draw with the pencil tool in Adobe Illustrator using a mouse and can create detailed vector illustrations with a mouse, I got so used to it, now when I try to get used to a tablet I cannot at all, and keep giving in. The tablet makes my hand cramp and it's a massive learning curve trying to control it, as it's become so comfortable with the mouse.

Amanda
 
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