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Computers and Software => Computers and Software - General => Topic started by: tonyt79 on May 27, 2015, 09:24:36 AM
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I have been kicking around the idea of getting a Wacom or other tablet. I had some extra cash come in and was thinking about going ahead and getting the Wacom Cintig 13HD. Anyone have any experience with these or other versions? Any input would be great.
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I absolutely love my Wacom tablet. Takes a bit of getting used to. But well worth it.
Murphy37
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I absolutely love my Wacom tablet. Takes a bit of getting used to. But well worth it.
Murphy37
Which one do you have?
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An Intuos 4. Its an older one. A artist buddy of mine gave it to me when he upgraded.
Murphy37
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I had one for years, but honestly I found I just wasn't using it very much. I can see the use of one of the super high end ones where you are drawing on the actual screen, but I always felt disconnected from the art using mine. I also had the Intuos 4.
Honestly, I prefer drawing on paper and scanning, then using the pen tool etc. To each their own of course.
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I have used mine for about 6 years now, it's on the smaller side, 4"x6" working area but I will be upgrading really soon. I want what I have now, but bigger and I can't seem to find anything close... I also had a bamboo cheapy 60.00 unit for my laptop and it sucked. the sensitivity settings were terrible.. Buy extra pens (stylus) with whatever you get. you'll need them. I think they are well worth it, spend a good buck and buy a nice one, stay away from the cheapy's...but everyone likes what they like, it just takes some getting used to.
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I've got an Intuos 4 and a Yiynova MVP10UHD+IPS graphics display tablet. The difference is night and day between hand and eye coordination of using a graphics tablet versus using a drawing tablet.
Consider these brands
Yiynova
Huion
Bosto kingtee
Monoprice
Any of these will improve quality of life.. uh.. I mean work process, over an intuos..
Another consideration is getting the lazy nezumi line stablizer plugin for what ever app you do your graphics in.
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I completely agree. Having the lcd (or whatever) on the tablet fixes a lot of the issues with these kinds of things, but obviously costs more. You really do have to consider the sensitivity and resolution etc as well. I have tried a few of the cheapo ones and the lines end up super jittery and basically need to be redrawn with the pen tool anyway, so you don't gain anything.
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I completely agree. Having the lcd (or whatever) on the tablet fixes a lot of the issues with these kinds of things, but obviously costs more. You really do have to consider the sensitivity and resolution etc as well. I have tried a few of the cheapo ones and the lines end up super jittery and basically need to be redrawn with the pen tool anyway, so you don't gain anything.
That's why you get lazy nezumi.. (Even if you're using a Cintiq you'll benefit) I've logged hundreds of hours before getting the line stabilizer and my lines were already to grade.. Im pushing at 1000 hours using my graphics display..
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I use a monoprice, cheap and works.
I think you gain the most efficiency at work using the models that have integrated touch pads, no awkward swapping between pen and mouse. Going to get one of those soon I think.
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My thoughts on the cintiq 13 is that it will mostly be used with my laptop and with it being a smaller version it will be more portable. That way I can work at the shop or at home.
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"I want what I have now, but bigger"
I know the feeling Jay
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I ended up getting the cintiq 13. It's pretty sweet! And small enough it can be mobile with my laptop.
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Sweet.. The configurable express keys are super cool.. It takes some getting use to them though.. Another cool/relax way to work if you are using photoshop is to use adobe configurator to create a custom panel with all your regularly used tools and commands and have it floating in your work area in close shot to your pen so so most execution will always be a pen action. The express keys can be secondary executions.. Shift Alt Ctrl Save Step Backward Step Forward and such. Flipping the pen to use eraser is tiresome so adding the eraser to your custom panel will help that. the front stylus button is excellent as a right click. The back button on the stylus is quirky to reach and gets in the way when the stylus rolls between your fingers as you work and triggers off unwanted actions. I disable mines. Let's see.. I don't use gloves (we gully) but I do have a screen cleaner.. The screen heats up but it won't bother you it's forgotten because you're focused on your graphics work.. Oh and most important.. if it's lcd, beware of screen burn in.. (your lcd can experience ghosting of your wall papper or opened widows) Avoid allowing the computer to go to sleep with the cintiq on, without a screen saver. (I never knew those. silly bobbing up and down and all over, had a purpose)
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Sweet.. The configurable express keys are super cool.. It takes some getting use to them though.. Another cool/relax way to work if you are using photoshop is to use adobe configurator to create a custom panel with all your regularly used tools and commands and have it floating in your work area in close shot to your pen so so most execution will always be a pen action. The express keys can be secondary executions.. Shift Alt Ctrl Save Step Backward Step Forward and such. Flipping the pen to use eraser is tiresome so adding the eraser to your custom panel will help that. the front stylus button is excellent as a right click. The back button on the stylus is quirky to reach and gets in the way when the stylus rolls between your fingers as you work and triggers off unwanted actions. I disable mines. Let's see.. I don't use gloves (we gully) but I do have a screen cleaner.. The screen heats up but it won't bother you it's forgotten because you're focused on your graphics work.. Oh and most important.. if it's lcd, beware of screen burn in.. (your lcd can experience ghosting of your wall papper or opened widows) Avoid allowing the computer to go to sleep with the cintiq on, without a screen saver. (I never knew those. silly bobbing up and down and all over, had a purpose)
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Thanks for the info. I have a lot to learn with it. Trying to transition to more photoshop and illustrator. I'm 95% corel now.
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great thoughts in this thread so far... I've got an Intuos 4 extra large tablet and stylus that I've used for the past few years. I would have bought the large instead if I were to go back in time. The last shop I worked in had the tiny 6" square tablets that were a little too small...I went to the other extreme but now I have to move the stylus across more real-estate to get the effect I need. I've gotten used to it and it is more helpful in small detail situations.
Every review I've seen mentions the disconnect between pen and result (when using the stylus and tablet) slows down production and that the real-time effect of the cintiq (or applicable draw-on tablet) has a positive change in workflow.
I've been wanting to purchase a Cintiq myself, though its not been in the budget just yet. There is a new 27" model coming out in July. I've been debating whether it was better to get a smaller more compact and mobile unit (cheaper also) or invest in a unit that allows for greater space? I don't travel much with my work.
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great thoughts in this thread so far... I've got an Intuos 4 extra large tablet and stylus that I've used for the past few years. I would have bought the large instead if I were to go back in time. The last shop I worked in had the tiny 6" square tablets that were a little too small...I went to the other extreme but now I have to move the stylus across more real-estate to get the effect I need. I've gotten used to it and it is more helpful in small detail situations.
Every review I've seen mentions the disconnect between pen and result (when using the stylus and tablet) slows down production and that the real-time effect of the cintiq (or applicable draw-on tablet) has a positive change in workflow.
I've been wanting to purchase a Cintiq myself, though its not been in the budget just yet. There is a new 27" model coming out in July. I've been debating whether it was better to get a smaller more compact and mobile unit (cheaper also) or invest in a unit that allows for greater space? I don't travel much with my work.
I thought the bigger one would be the best way to go, may still feel the same way later. But with a small shop(just the 2 of us) most of the drawing/design work only happens at the house. In the shop it's go, go, go in every direction besides the computer.
There are things I do not like about this little cintiq, like the way the cords are set up. No real time spent on it so besides that it's very nice and responsive.
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Who did you buy it through? Amazon?
Mat Woodworth
www.boldlinedesign.com
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Who did you buy it through? Amazon?
Mat Woodworth
www.boldlinedesign.com
I bought it from frys. I went and bought it at the store.