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Mar 23

My first drawing device was a Wacom intuos. It worked pretty well for me, but it wasn’t ideal. Next I got an ipad & apple pen. For some reason the slippery feel of an ipad screen doesn’t bother me. I’ve been using it ever since.

I'm using an Amazon Fire my mom bought me. I would not recommend it but I'm grateful for it.

That´s an option for me too, I have done all my last pages with pencil and ink and it was more fun
and I´m faster that way, I also think that traditional ink looks better.
I could still use digital tools to clean the pages and get the pages ready for print

1) scanner, pencil, eraser, pilot fineliner... color in photoshop

2) Wacom intuos + laptop... coloring in photoshop

3) ibis paint + moto e phone

4) presently... Samsung galaxy a8 + ibis paint

I started out with one of those Wacom tablets but couldn't get the hand-eye coordination right, so I decided I needed to draw directly on a screen. I bought a Microsoft Surface Pro 8 and absolutely loved it but found it to be a bit cramped - not to mention the fact that t didn't quite have enough horsepower. With several layers Krita would bog down and eventually crash.

Last year I bought myself a Dell Inspiron 7630 2-in one laptop. It has a 16" 16:10 OLED screen with 3840X2880 native resolution. The pixel density is right up there with Apple's Retina display (it's actually higher in some cases) and the OLED makes colours really pop. It came with a rechargeable stylus that seems to be very precise - where I touch the screen with it is where it draws, anyway. With an Intel i7 i360p processor and 32GB RAM it has more than enough horsepower to run Krita, and I've never seen it even hiccup when working on a 6000X4000 pixel image with twenty or more layers. Because it's a real laptop with a real keyboard I can write on it, and when I want to draw I just fold the screen backward and it converts into a tablet.

It was exactly the same for me, the hand eye coordination thing didn´t work at all.
I tried it every day for one year, but I just turned 40 when I first tried it and that´s
probably the reason. Probably also the reason why I will always miss the texture
of paper

I own a wacom 27inch cintiq and it works great. Never an issue with it. I bought a chinese version and returned it in 2 days, it was not good. I also own a samsung tablet with Spen and it is good if you need a portable device and don't want to spend real money. Used the older cintiqs in animation college and all were good.

Depends on what I’m doing. Normal drawing, I’m using an IPad, (older one). If I’m on my MacBook to do vector drawing or something like that, I use a basic Wacom tablet.

I used my father's old Samsung Galaxy for longer than my current drawing tablet. That thing is considered a relic because of how slow it works now! I couldn't even believe I used it. :joy:

But I have been using Huion Kamvas 13 since 2021! (I can't believe it's been that long either, damn) It still works perfectly well, I felt like I chose the correct drawing tablet. I have no plans on getting a new one if this one hasn't shown any sign of breaking. :thinking:

That´s what all my illustrator friends say about the Cintiq + I´m a shopping victim :smiley:

Oh this is interesting, I actually hated the feeling of drawing on a Wacom tablet and prefer directly drawing on the iPad. Not so much because of the texture difference but I enjoy drawing directly on the surface instead of being detached drawing a blank screen that translates to the monitor. I did hear they make paper feel ipad screen protectors though to give the same vibe as a traditional drawing tablet, or paper lol.

I got an ipad because it was cheaper than buying a cintiq and a drawing program like photoshop and a desktop computer to use it with. My iPad was used and I got it for around $400 with the pen included. I bet the same ipad is even cheaper now.

I got the paperlike screen protector on my ipad and the pen is still slipping like crazy
and still feels like hard plastique on glass. I don´t feel any difference to drawing on
the screen. I bought a pen cover made out of some kind of leather and it´s got
better that way because now it has some friction but it´s not as precise anymore

The wacom device you are talking about is the intuos, it didn´t work for me either.
With the cintiq you draw directly on the screen like on the ipad

5th Gen iPad Pro. I've used it for my comics entire run, and I'm very content with it. I use it with a 2nd Gen Apple Pencil and draw everything in Procreate.

Only other digital drawing device I had before it was a Wacom Intuos. It was okay, but it was uncomfortable enough that it discouraged me from doing much digital drawing.

Ah I see, I hadn’t tried out the paper feel ones myself! And cintiqs are nice, they had them at the college I went to. I just don’t have the right set up for it, all I have is crap laptop so I feel like photoshop would lag so badly :sob: I usually draw traditionally though.

I had the paper-texture thing on my Surface, and I liked it, but man, did it ever chew up nibs for the pen. It did go a long way toward steadying my hand though. Unfortunately I haven't been able to find something like it for my Inspiron.

Oh NO? Thanks for the warning, honestly I was thinking of trying the paper-feel screen protectors out myself but I already wear out my nibs normally.

The cintiq pen has a rubber tipped nip that will slow down the pen so act like its on paper. They don't last long (I use a nip an episode) but they cost like $6 for 5.

IPad mini (read: cheapest I could find), apple pencil (its held together with tape and prayers), and procreate. Just the normal glass for texture.

Before that I used a Wacom intuos small and paint tool sai. Never had an issue with it, just switched to an iPad because at the time I bought it I was spending 3hrs on the bus 5 days a week and decided I could at least be productive. Now it's just easier than transferring projects back and forth-- besides, my laptop is a piece of junk that freezes and blue screens constantly so I'd rather just use the iPad and not risk losing my progress...

I use a wacom one, or those massive cintiqs if I'm at school. I quite like the wacom one but I had to replace the cord after a couple years - might have been my fault with how I was handling it, though

My huion kamvas has lasted me several years at this point, and I have no complaints! I started out on a wacom intuos but wanted to upgrade to a screen tablet. :>