An advertisement for Kid Pix Professional was bundled with Kid Pix when he released it in November 1989.
Encouraged by a friend to sell his software rather than give it away, Hickman began working on a commercial enhanced version of the original monochrome Kid Pix freeware release, called Kid Pix Professional, which would retail for US$25 (equivalent to $50 in 2020). The Color Macintosh was released before Hickman's first launch of his program, which he had named Kid Pix. It was this experience that encouraged Hickman to write a simple paint program for his son to use he also decided to make this freely available. Hickman noted how quickly he adapted to the use of the mouse and keyboard, but also that he inadvertently activated pop-up menus and other user interface elements. While using MacPaint that year, his then-3-year-old son expressed a desire to use the application. After leaving college he continued to write programs for his own education, and by 1988 owned an Apple Macintosh and had begun distributing software in the public domain.
This impressed upon Hickman a desire to learn how to program. Craig Hickman was studying photography at Evergreen State College in 1972 with the aim of taking a career in fine art photography when he encountered a friend entering code into a teletype in the college's terminal room.