Affinity Designer: Basics

Affinity Designer is a vector-oriented drawing program. It is suitable for creating graphics, illustrations and pictograms. At the beginning of the course you will learn the basics of the program and try it out with short assignments. Participants are invited to bring their illustration projects to the second part of the course.

General information

Duration 15 hours
  • User interface, artboards, tools, layers and guides
  • Vector graphics vs. raster graphics
  • Creating shapes
  • Drawing with the Path tool
  • Working with text
  • Colors and color spaces
  • Importing and exporting files
  • Introducing StudioLink
Students and employees of the University of Zurich who use Affinity Designer in their university work.
At the end of the course, participants will be able to professionally create their own projects with Affinity Designer and will know the benefits of StudioLink, which allows them to connect the three Affinity programs. Participants will be able to create and edit objects and paths, import text or images, work with layers and clipping masks, and prepare graphics for offset printing.
  • User interface, artboards, tools, layers and guides
  • Vector graphics vs. raster graphics
  • Creating shapes
  • Drawing with the Path tool
  • Working with text
  • Colors and color spaces
  • Importing and exporting files
  • Introducing StudioLink
Materials will be provided in the course. The following teaching materials may be helpful for course attendance and review at home:
Affinity Designer Workbook: https://affinity.serif.com/en-gb/designer/workbook/
Affinity Designer Tutorials: https://vimeo.com/channels/affinitydesigner
In a mixture of inputs and work phases, the course content is taught in a practical way.
If possible, bring your own illustration tasks and questions to the course.

Dates

Code Referents Dates Available seats Place
HS24-AADE1 Selmi Reed Miriam 03.10.2024 - 31.10.2024 (09:00 - 12:00 o'clock)
Online Course Course registration begins on 1 February for the spring semester and on 1 September for the autumn semester.