We stand with Ukraine to help keep people safe. Join us
All Apps
Best AppsReviewsComparisonsHow-To
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission

Sketsa for Mac

Vector drawing application based on SVG.

$89.00
In English
Version 9.1
0.8
Based on 3 user rates

Sketsa overview

Sketsa is a cross-platform vector drawing application based on SVG. Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) is a graphics format and technology based on XML developed by W3C. With Sketsa, you can create vector graphics that can be scaled and printed at any resolution, without losing detail or clarity. You also get instant visual feedback on what you changed.

Sketsa features various tools for optimizing content creation, giving designers unsurpassed support for creativity. These tools include property palette, DOM editor, source editor, resources editor, SVG specific shape tools, transformation tools, and additional illustration tools. It uses SVG as a native file format.

What’s new in version 9.1

  • Release notes were unavailable when this listing was updated.

Sketsa for Mac

$89.00
In English
Version 9.1
Write a detailed review about Sketsa

Write your thoughts in our old-fashioned comment

MacUpdate Comment Policy. We strongly recommend leaving comments, however comments with abusive words, bullying, personal attacks of any type will be moderated.
0.8

(4 Reviews of Sketsa)

  • Comments

  • User Ratings

Mark-Everitt
Mark-Everitt
Jun 18 2010
6.3
0.0
Jun 18 2010
0.0
Version: 6.3
If you want SVG and cross platform, then the answer is Inkscape. It runs in X11, but compared with Java this is still better. It's free too, and far more advanced than Sketsa on all fronts.
Haleonearth
Haleonearth
Jan 6 2010
6.0
1.0
Jan 6 2010
1.0
Version: 6.0
Icky yucky Java poo!
hced
hced
Mar 14 2007
4.2
0.0
Mar 14 2007
0.0
Version: 4.2
Java "powered"...
Guest
Guest
Sep 12 2004
2.1
0.0
Sep 12 2004
0.0
Version: 2.1
This is a "generic" Java application. There's a Java (.jar) installer and a PC (.exe) file in the download. Installing it (via the .jar file on a Mac) does not result in a Mac-like application or icon; it requires a command line start via Java. Discovering that, I wasn't interested any more and trashed all. It doesn't have to be this way, either. CrushFTP, to name just one example, is in Java, but it behaves like a normal application on both a Mac (OS 9) or a PC.
M-Rick
M-Rick
Jun 26 2013
0.5
Jun 26 2013
0.5
Version: null
L-G-S
L-G-S
May 10 2011
1.0
May 10 2011
1.0
Version: null
Haleonearth
Haleonearth
Jan 6 2010
1.0
Jan 6 2010
1.0
Version: null