I was excited for the new app, yet slightly distraught that my just-published words were now seemingly obsolete. Instead of continuing with Adobe Shape CC, Adobe combined four mobile apps (Adobe Color CC, Adobe Shape CC, Adobe Brush CC, and Adobe Hue CC) into one "mega" app called Adobe Capture CC. Then, just one day (literally) after our two-part series was published on, Adobe announced at the 2015 Adobe MAX Conference in Los Angeles that Adobe Shape CC was being retired. The next thing I knew, we had written a two-part tutorial ( Part 1 and Part 2) and created how-to videos on Adobe Shape CC, showing how it could be used immediately as a viable, creative tool.Īdobe Shape CC was the game changer in my mind, but it was still just a small tool to be included in my toolbox. I shared it with my friend and mentor, Bonny Pierce Lhotka (author of Hacking the Digital Print: Alternative Image Capture and Printmaking Processes). I was thrilled at how it instantly captured vector shapes. "Web apps are cool and fun and different, but I just don't see how I can incorporate them into my design process," I said at this time last year. Hacking the Digital Print: Alternative image capture and printmaking processes with a special section on 3D printing
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