- Cavalry's pro-motion tools are free for all
- Affinity now lets you send designs direct to your Canva Brand Kit
- Plus new Affinity integrations with Capture One and DaVinci Resolve
I didn't expect this, but Canva has just announced a major piece of creative software is to be free for everyone.
Following the decision to make Affinity, the popular photo editor and layout designer, free for everyone forever (I covered the news here), the parent company has pulled the same trick twice.
This time, it's pro-motion software Cavalry that's stripping out subscriptions. All users will now have access to the full range of features for free.
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If you haven't heard of Cavalry before, it's 2D animation software loaded with a host of professional tools covering everything from advertising to game design.
Canva acquired the company in February 2026. So, unlike Affinity, which remained in stasis for years after being bought by Canva, the 'buy-out to free model pipeline' has been rapid with this one.
The service previously offered a free Starter version and a Professional paid-for subscription, which has been scrapped.
On the new launch, Canva's CEO Pro Design, Duncan Clark, said: “Motion isn't a nice-to-have anymore, it's a core element of effective design. We're excited to offer every creative access to Cavalry's powerful procedural tools, not just those with a dedicated studio behind them.”
And it's not all, with Affinity getting more love.
The headline feature for the free software is a new Claude connection, delivering new AI and automation tools.
Clark promises these AI-powered extras will "free creatives from incredibly tedious work, the kind of thing that used to eat up an afternoon, so they can spend more time on the creative decisions that actually matter.”
Affinity will now support Brand System. This workflow upgrade lets users create designs using the software, before sending them direct to the Brand Kit in Canva.
Support for Affinity's .af files are also expanding, with Capture One and DaVinci Resolve integrations.
The moves represent a major shift towards offering a full-stack creative service alongside what's being dubbed 'Canva AI 2.0'.
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