Computer drawing Tablets
Moderators: Víctor Paredes, Belgarath, slowtiger
Computer drawing Tablets
Hey im looking into buying a computer drawing tablet, to draw directly into my PC applications. Ive been using a mouse for AS, but for applications like flash and Photoshop i think the pen tablet is the way to go. My question for anyone out there is what do you guys use and what brand do you suggest? I would want one that works great with flash and photoshop!
thanks!
bartender
thanks!
bartender
I've owned 2 Wacom and 1 Aiptek. The Aiptek was absolute crap. The first Wacom was an ArtZ II 6x8" serial. When computers no longer came with serial ports, I had to get a replacement, so I got a Graphire (3? 4? I don't remember) 6x8" again, USB. The Intuos has more levels of pressure sensitivity and tilt, but the Graphire works well enough for my purposes.
I have a Wacom Graphire... 3? It has a mouse and a stylus.
It was good for a while... but some of the "pixels" went wonky on the pad thingy. The mouse is useless now. When it crosses a dead spot the cursor flies off on strange voyages across the screen. Very annoying.
I only use it now for painting. The pen still works pretty good as far as I can tell. Those wonky pixels haven't caused any trouble. It could be the mouse that is the problem and not the pad area. I have no idea.
I have run the pen nib or tip down to almost nothing. I don't even know if you can put a new one in or not. The old one I used years ago had replacement nibs. This one I can't figure out if it even opens.
I was disappointed because it went bad so quick... it out lasted the warranty but still... you would expect it to last longer than that. I got a good year or so out of it and it was fairly inexpensive.
-vern
It was good for a while... but some of the "pixels" went wonky on the pad thingy. The mouse is useless now. When it crosses a dead spot the cursor flies off on strange voyages across the screen. Very annoying.
I only use it now for painting. The pen still works pretty good as far as I can tell. Those wonky pixels haven't caused any trouble. It could be the mouse that is the problem and not the pad area. I have no idea.
I have run the pen nib or tip down to almost nothing. I don't even know if you can put a new one in or not. The old one I used years ago had replacement nibs. This one I can't figure out if it even opens.
I was disappointed because it went bad so quick... it out lasted the warranty but still... you would expect it to last longer than that. I got a good year or so out of it and it was fairly inexpensive.
-vern
Some of the Wacom tablets do have pens that you are unable to replace the nib. I have a Volito 2 which I have had for nearly 2 years (everday use - I don't use a mouse at all on my laptop) and found excellent. I have seen them for £26 on Amazon! The pen has to be replaced when the nib wears (and I did buy a spare pen from the Wacom spares store) but that hasn't happened yet so they obviously last a while.
The only other tablet I've seen get as good reviews as Wacom was a Genius Pensketch which cost under £100 for a 9" x 12" but they seem to be very rare.
The only other tablet I've seen get as good reviews as Wacom was a Genius Pensketch which cost under £100 for a 9" x 12" but they seem to be very rare.
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I wish I had the money for a Cintiq. It would make traditional animation much easier in apps like Flash.slowtiger wrote:Any wacom tablet will do, personally I prefer the A5 size, too. For bitmap animation I use my Cintiq.
As for the original question, the only way to go is WACOM. All the others are trash in comparison. I use an Intuos 3 6x"8" tablet and like it. A Cintiq is the best, but at $2500 I won't have one of those anytime soon.
- toonertime
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tablets
i use a flair II, a cheapo tablet, and it works fine