The Fireworks Advantage

By Dave Roach on January 22, 2009 at 4:14 pm in Design, Development, Reviews

Adobe Fireworks CS4 BoxFireworks is often overlooked. Many (most) web designers today use Photoshop to design their websites, and a lot of them have never considered or (*gasp) even heard of Fireworks. Adobe Fireworks is made for creating websites. That is what it was built for, and it does it well. Fireworks enables you to rapidly prototype and design for the web. With it you can create a clickable PDF that will act as a prototype. Also, you can quickly create export and optimize slices (Fireworks is better at optimizing images than Photoshop).

Now don’t get me wrong, Photoshop is an extremely powerful tool and is amazing; it has way more features than Fireworks, but if all you are doing is designing websites, then you should use software that was specifically made for doing just that. Another excellent feature to note about Fireworks is that it is compatible with Photoshop. For the most part, you can open a psd in Fireworks, and it will recognize all of your layers and styles, and with CS4, compatability between Adobe’s programs have been further improved.

If you are a web designer and have not looked into using Fireworks, you should at least try it out and see for yourself how efficient it really is. There are hundreds of other excellent features Fireworks has to offer, read more about them at Adobe’s site.

Update on issues regarding Adobe Fireworks CS4 Beta

By Dave Roach on September 15, 2008 at 12:03 pm in Design, General

In taking a further look at Fireworks CS4 beta, I have come across some compatibility issues between the previous version and this one. Hopefully this issue will get sorted out as development continues with Fireworks CS4.

Recently I was designing a final version of a web site, all pages and content included. Upon reopening the design in CS3, I found that all of the text had strangely changed values. The kerning, spacing and point size of the text that changed by fractions of a value, and even the type itself was altered. Any word above about 8 characters got shortened. Furthermore, I had some lines of text that had two different colors in the same text box, and they were changed to the first color. Finally, I had used Arial font in the CS4 version of the final, and upon reopening the file, CS3 thought Arial (somehow replaced by Arial MT) need to be replaced, so I replaced it with Arial (considering that I did not have the choice and never had had the choice of selecting Arial MT). So in a nutshell I was forced to replace Arial with Arial, which may have caused the problems listed above.

So obviously CS4 is not yet compatible with previous versions of Fireworks, and CS4 really should only be used for testing until the actual release.

Fireworks CS4 Beta so far…

By Dave Roach on August 29, 2008 at 6:30 am in Design, General

So I was looking around the other day on Adobe’s website and found that there was a beta release for Fireworks CS4!!! So I downloaded and installed it and am currently using it. What’s even cooler is that as long as you own Fireworks CS3, you can use the serial number from your old Fireworks to keep the beta until a month after the actual product come out. Pretty sweet, eh?

Anyways, I really like Fireworks CS4. Honestly, I think it’s far, far better than CS3. The first thing I noticed when loading CS4 for the first time is that its layout is much more like Photoshop, Illustrator and Flash CS3. Instead of having all of your pallets open at once and crowding your screen, you can keep them into their own sections, and show them as needed.

You can even collapse them into single buttons, if you’re that good, or keep it the old way if you’d rather.

Also, Fireworks CS4 now allows the tabbing of different documents, so if you’re working on multiple documents they can be tabbed into one window, instead of have like 5 bajillion windows open at the same time… IE6 anyone??

Both of these features are excellent organizational tools, that will give you more room to design without the clutter of open panels.

There seems to be more options throughout CS4 as well. For instance you can space objects evenly by a certain percentage or pixel amount. There are a ton more path editing tools available, so that will make working with vector objects much easier.

Fireworks CS4 also has a ton more styles! Styles are organized into different categories on a dropdown menu, and there or tons of them! My favorite is the diagonal styles, which will make my job a lot easier if I want to make diagonals quickly.

I’m sure there is a ton more new features the CS4 has that I have yet to discover as well.

I have been using the beta for about a week and am convinced that the final of Fireworks CS4 will be superior to CS3.  I have found a few bugs here and there that I’m sure they will iron out (after all, it is a beta). Sometimes selecting things can be a pain, for some reason it takes two or three clicks to select objects most of the time.

The more I use Fireworks, the more powerful I realize it is, and with this update Fireworks will become an even greater tool for designing sweet websites.