Free Affinity Designer



Just as feature-packed as the desktop version, Affinity Designer for iPad is a professional graphic design app with everything you need to create stunning illustrations, branding, icons, UI/UX designs, print projects, typography, concept art and much more — all completely free from the confines of your desk!

  1. Free Affinity Designer Course
  2. Free Affinity Designer Fonts
Free

1,473 Best Affinity Designer Free Brush Downloads from the Brusheezy community. Affinity Designer Free Brushes licensed under creative commons, open source, and more!

  1. Optimized for the latest tech on Mac, Windows and iPad, Affinity Designer is setting the new industry standard in the world of design. Best in class for creating concept art, print projects, logos, icons, UI designs, mock-ups and more, it’s already the top choice of thousands of professional illustrators, web designers, game developers.
  2. Take your designs further Just as feature-packed as the desktop version, Affinity Designer for iPad is a professional graphic design app with everything you need to create stunning illustrations, branding, icons, UI/UX designs, print projects, typography, concept art and much more — all completely free from the confines of your desk!

No subscription and 50% off

Affinity Designer for iPad does not require any subscription, it’s simply €21.99 – and right now available with 50% off!

Fonts

Craft perfect vector curves or combine objects and shapes using complex Boolean operations. You can also create abstract shapes or an offset path with the powerful contour tool.

Easily combine vector and raster graphics. You can use raster paint brushes to add texture to vector work, edit single pixels on icons and more — it’s a whole new way of working.

Apply advanced grids and guides, draw directly on isometric planes, and use precise snapping controls including snap to pixel and pixel alignment.

CMYK, RGB8, RGB16, Grayscale, LAB and even RGB32. Work in any color space, with full confidence that any documents taken from the Windows or macOS version will always render with 100% fidelity.

Work with unlimited layers, including real-time blend modes with range adjustment and simple drop zones to mask, clip, reorder and group all layer types. Text layers, vector layers, pixel and image layers all fully supported.

Super smooth gradients, transparency, glows, shadows and more — gain full control over the appearance of all your strokes and shapes. Even add multiple fills and strokes to the same object.

Organise your work with artboards. You can have as many as you like, whatever size you like.

Include unlimited instances of the same object across your work. Edit one and the rest update instantly.

Get a live pixel preview of your work so you know exactly how your vectors will export in raster format. Or switch to outline view to see all those beautiful curves.

Enjoy full text capabilities, including OpenType and text styles. You can flow text along any curve too.

Directly output your work from iPad into professional formats, including EPS, SVG, PSD, and PDF X, ready for print.

Fully optimised for iPadOS, with the ability to drag and drop to import and export images from any location on iPad. You can even work directly on PSD files and save back to PSD.

Create your own shortcut keys using a keyboard attachment for an even more streamlined workflow.

No subscription and 50% off

Affinity Designer for iPad does not require any subscription, it’s simply €21.99 – and right now available with 50% off!

Bored of your current system fonts? Why not explore some free font websites before parting with your hard earned cash.

With the recent release of Affinity Publisher, it feels like just the right time to showcase some font websites that are very popular, and of course free.

We’ll go beyond the essential features expected of such sites, i.e. searching, category filtering (top rated, featured, by style) and font previewing, which most sites share.

The rankings in this article are based on the author’s opinions and research only.

1. Google Fonts

Free Affinity Designer Course

Probably the most well-known free font provider. The site is mainly intended for provision of fonts for websites, but the fonts will be perfectly acceptable for print or PDF output using Affinity Publisher.

The Good: 952 font families, easy-to-use website with previews, searchable by category. If a free font can’t be found, a purchasable equivalent is offered via the provider’s website.

The Bad: It isn’t immediately obvious how to download your chosen font! Tip: After selecting the font family you will able to spot the download button from the pop-up box!

2. Font Squirrel

This site claims its fonts are 100% Free for Commercial use. As always, check the licence for your chosen font (the licence will be included along with the downloaded font).

The Good: Over 1000 font families locally available. The font summary shows icons indicating licencing restrictions (e.g., for embedding). One-click downloads are a real time saver.

The Bad: Some of the advertising seemed to get in the way of important font search and filtering features. The site also looks a little dated and didn’t size to my browser window too well.

3. FontSpace

This is a big website, with a nice show/hide browser to access fonts via a rage of interesting categories. Optional login available.

The Good: 60,000+ fonts. A clean design with hover overs for licencing information before download.

The Bad: Adverts seem to masquerade as font category navigation bars.

4. Lost Type

While limited in the number of fonts available compared to the other sites, you get a very creative set of fonts nicely presented in card format.

The main distinction from the other sites is that the site operates on a cooperative basis.You can either:

  • Pay what you want to for personal use

or:

  • For some fonts, you can pay a nominal fee for commercial use

The Good: The site is fun and feels creatively led. If you donate, 100% of sales goes to the originating font designer. Font previews are presented in actual design examples.

The Bad: No search feature or Records per Page view. Only 50 typefaces available.

5. DaFont

The site covers a wide range of fonts (they quote 43,030!) segregated into many font categories. The fonts encountered were mainly free for personal use only. Optional login available.

The Good: The site offers filtering by themes (e.g., fancy, gothic, techno) and font designer. What looks like a popular forum helps users identify fonts visually.

The Bad: Another site that offers a multitude of adverts masquerading as font category navigation, and use the Themes filter or search feature you should be able to get what you need.Registering and subsequent login doesn’t reduce the volume of advertising displayed.

Well yes, they are, but it’s worth noting that the free font may have a more limited glyph and special character support compared to a purchased font.

Not surprisingly, your downloaded free font will install and be made available to Affinity Designer, Photo and Publisher as for other fonts on macOS and Windows systems.

If you’re using Affinity Designer or Affinity Photo on iPad, you’ll have to install your free font via the Preferences (Fonts tab) before it becomes available to your app. This is due to the iOS environment being more ‘locked down’ compared to its desktop counterparts.

If you’re on a limited budget, free fonts are a life saver. For professional output, you may want to invest in purchasable commercial fonts from commercial font sites for absolute assurance on quality and licencing, but only if you’re able to stretch your budget further. Notable commercial sites include MyFonts.com, FontShop.com and fonts.com amongst others.

Free Affinity Designer Fonts

One important caveat is that fonts sourced from some of the free websites mentioned often means for “For Personal Use Only”. However, some free fonts offer purchasable upgrades to commercial equivalents, often by contacting the font designer directly. If donations are welcomed in relation to free fonts you have the option to support the hard work of the font designer at your discretion.