A few days ago, Adobe had another price increase for its Creative Cloud programs. Annoyed by this change, Twitter user Ghost Malone created an extensive list of alternatives, in case you don’t feel like paying more for major Adobe CC programs.  They cover different areas, from image editing to building websites, and all of them are free.

— ? kerrigan ? (@anKerrigan) January 11, 2019 Adobe increased prices in spring last year, and now there’s another increase for the USA, Canada, and Mexico. If you use a single app, then it’s a $1/month increase, but All Apps plans will cost you $10 more per month. In an article from a few years ago, you can find six Adobe Photoshop alternatives. But, Ghost Malone’s list includes the alternatives for other Adobe CC programs, too. All of them are free, but some have premium versions that are paid. You can see his list below, and we’ve also added a few of our own suggestions.

If you draw or design

Photoshop alternatives: Gimp, Krita, Fire Alpaca, Autodesk Sketchbook, Medibang Paint, or Affinity Photo Lightroom alternative: paint.net, Skylum Luminar Illustrator alternative: Inkscape InDesign alternative: Canva or Scribus

If you make pictures move

Premiere alternatives: Davinci Resolve or Hitfilm Express Animate/Flash alternatives: Opentoonz, Plastic Animation Paper, Easytoon, or Blender After Effects alternatives: Wax, Blender, or Fusion

If you build websites or software

Dreamweaver, Spark, or XD alternatives: Notepad++, WIX, Weebly, wordpress.com, OR Sublime Text

If you do stuff that requires these other programs

Audition alternatives: Audacity, Wavepad, Ocenaudio, or LMMS Acrobat Pro alternatives: Foxit Reader, PDFmate, or PDF Escape

If you need stock photos or fonts

Adobe Stock alternatives: Pexels, Unsplash, or Pixabay Adobe Fonts alternatives: Google Fonts, Font Squirrel, or Dafont BONUS: Free music or sound effects: YouTube Audio Library, Incompetech, or SoundbibleClip art: OpenclipartTextures: textures.com One more thing I’d like to add is Photopea, a Photoshop clone that works in a browser and it’s completely free to use. Judging from Stefan Kohler’s review, it’s pretty good. I tried playing with it a bit, too, and it really is impressive (although a bit slow on my crappy computer). So there you have it, a whole bunch of free programs and websites if you’re fed up with Adobe CC for whichever reason. I already use some of them, but there are a few more that I’ll go and download straight away. Do you already use any of these alternatives? Which ones would you recommend? [via Ghost Malone]