Product Review: Adobe Creative Cloud Express

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Last December, Adobe—the company that makes Photoshop, InDesign, Acrobat, and other computer programs for creative professionals—released a new suite of digital tools for web and mobile called Creative Cloud Express. Designed as a more accessible version of Adobe’s Creative Suite, the program offers easy-to-use layout and image-editing software that allows just about anyone with access to the web or a smartphone to produce visuals ranging from menus to Instagram stories. Though the suite isn’t entirely new—it’s actually a next-generation version of what was formerly known as Adobe Spark (a web and mobile tool, geared to nonprofessionals, for making web-friendly graphics, images, and videos), it now comes with Adobe Photoshop Express and Adobe Premiere Rush.

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I wanted to see if Creative Cloud Express could be a useful tool for artists, particularly as a way for them to promote their work. To find out, I created two types of content for fictional artists: a notice for a gallery exhibition and a promotional video. Both needed to be relatively easy and not too time consuming to produce. For each, I used the web-based, rather than the mobile-based version, of the program.

Here’s what I discovered:

A notice for a fine-art gallery opening

Though notices for gallery or museum shows were once either sent through the mail or printed in newspapers or magazines, today they more often appear in digital form. I found that using Creative Cloud Express worked very well for creating both still and animated digital notices.

When you start using the program, you’ll find lots of examples of layouts, which are actually templates that you can use for your own work. Click on one you like and then click on the button on the bottom that reads, “Create from this template.” And you’re on your way! Many of the tools have drag-and-drop functionality, which let you customize the templates.

Creative Cloud Express is free, but with a $9.99 per month subscription, you’ll also have access from within the app to 20,000 premium Adobe fonts and 175 million royalty-free images from Adobe Stock.

For my exhibition notice, a gallery invite for a show of work by a fictional artist, I simply typed “still life” into Adobe Stock, and a vast array of still-life images, including animated images, came up in the results. When working with images, you can use the “Quick Actions” tools to perform various tasks, such as removing a background from a photo, or autotoning, cropping, or straightening images.

Once you’ve selected your template and image, you have access to several tools, including Colors, Animation, Background, Resize and Design. If you click the Colors, two circular icons show you what the current color palette is for the design. what the current color palette (comprising five colors) is for the design. The left circle lets you change one of the colors and the right circle lets you shuffle how they’re used in the design. Below, you’ll find more five-color palettes you can try out.

Here’s my final design.

Final gallery invite.

With my template, I could either post my design as a static image or as a four-second animation, for which I animated the still life image and the frame as well as the top and bottom border graphics.

To see the animated version of the notice, click here.

A promotional video for an artist’s work

Next, I used Creative Cloud Express to create a promotional video for a the fictitious artist. This proved a bit more of a challenge because it had more pieces to assemble. However, though it took me longer to make the video than to make the notice, the process was more or less the same: I chose a template, added media and text, adjusted colors and designs, and the video was ready to download or publish.

I wanted the opening of the video to stand out, so I searched for a template that would let me animate the title so it would fade in slowly.

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For my video, I used a rather touristy video that I made on my trip to Greece last year.

There are a number of limitations using Creative Cloud Express, particularly for video. I had considered adding my own music track and an animated segment to my video, but I wasn’t able to create either within the program itself. In the end, I forgot about the animation and chose an audio track from one of 17 built into the program.

This is not to say that you can’t upload your own music or animations along with your video, but file size matters in Creative Cloud Express. When uploading audio files, you may have to use a lower-quality clip. And you need to watch how large your video clips are, since the program won’t accept a video file larger than 200MBs.

To see my final promo video, click here.

It took me about two hours to create the animated notice for the gallery exhibition and four hours to create the video. So in my view, the experiment was a success! Though it has limitations, Adobe Creative Cloud Express is definitely a useful tool for anyone, including artists, who want to promote their product but have little or no background in graphic design.

Pricing

There are two ways you can try out the service—and one is free. However, the premium plan, which costs $9.99 a month, also comes with a 30-day free trial. You can review both plans in detail here.

Some tips for using Creative Cloud Express

Though I made these promos on my computer, you can also access Creative Cloud Express on your phone. So, the tools to promote your work are always with you! But learning how to use a new digital tool isn’t always easy. To get you started, here are a few tips that should keep in mind when you use the service.

1. Find help from Adobe online
Web version: If you’re on the Creative Cloud Express home screen, go to the far-left-hand side of screen, where you’ll find several icons. The bottom icon is “Learn,” which will bring you to a group of video tutorials. For more in-depth help, click on the support at the bottom of the page.
Mobile app version: Click on the Gear icon in the upper right-hand corner of the app and then click on Help, which takes you directly to the Support page.

2. Google your question
When you’re unsure of a feature, or if you have a specific question about that feature, ask Google. For example, you can type in, “What can I animate in Creative Cloud Express?” The top result brings you to a webpage on the topic from Adobe’s user guide, which includes more than a dozen animations and a couple of YouTube videos.

3. Be sure to take some time to experiment with the tools. And be patient with yourself!

For more on the new suite of digital tools, check out the following useful links:
Adobe Creative Cloud Express
Introducing Creative Cloud Express, a new suite of tools that helps anyone create by Scott Belsky
Introducing Creative Cloud Express for Education by Mala Sharma
Creative Cloud Express Features by Justin Church

Source: artnews.com

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