S2 stabilizer paint tool sai lazy nezumi pro
- #S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO DRIVER#
- #S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO ANDROID#
- #S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO PRO#
- #S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO SOFTWARE#
- #S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO PC#
It was only $650 when I bought it, don't know what they sell for now, but I think it's cheaper than the Wacom hybrid tablet and I know it's a hell of a lot cheaper than the cheapest Cintiq.įor my PC I have an Intuos which I really only use for 3D sculpting.
#S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO SOFTWARE#
I'm out on the road a lot and don't have a PC with me so it's really nice to be able to draw with just the tablet and autodesk's Sketchbook 3 software does pretty much everything I need and what it doesn't do I have other apps that I can bounce the image around in to do what I need.
#S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO ANDROID#
Wacom is either coming out with or has already come out with a hybrid tablet that works as both and android tablet and as a Cintiq on a PC but from what I've read of the reviews the compromise makes it a shit android tablet and a shit PC tablet.Ī few months ago I bought a Galaxy NotePro which is the 12 inch Samsung tablet with the Wacom digitizer. Samsung ended up buying Wacom just so they could ensure that in the future Samsung tablets would be the only one with Wacom digitizers that's why Acer and Microsoft no longer use Wacom digitizers in their tablets. TL DR will the flawed but cheap enough Intuos Small work for me? or should I suck a dick and get an expensive medium sized one? I mean, yeah, I can afford them, but it's still a bit unfair it's not the right price and it will hurt to get something that expensive knowing it's probably not worth the price. For it, the "pros" are its price and the fact that it has everything I need in a tablet, and the "cons" MIGHT be its size and the length of the cable.Īs for the other two, they're better than the Intuos Small in every sense, so the only "cons" are the high price.
With all that being said, what would be the best choice in my situation? it's also worth saying that my screen is 20'' and since it's a desktop the tablet should also have a long USB, which is why I'm hesitating about the Intuos Small. For the same reason, I can't buy a Huion either, they don't sell them here and I would need to import it. If you want it back you have to travel to the other side of the country and sometimes pay like half the price of the product, sometimes much more. "But Anon, why don't you just get it from Amazon then?" long story short, Amazon is not an option, you import something and the government keeps it before it reaches your door. No, the Local is not according to local money, it's according to what the local price equals to in american dollars. Local amazon-like E-store: around $160 or more My dilema is -and other anons like the Russian guy might know recognize me from the other thread- that where I live the difference between the price of them is very fucking high.
#S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO PRO#
The Intuos Pro is out of question, for now.
#S2 STABILIZER PAINT TOOL SAI LAZY NEZUMI PRO DRIVER#
It's either that, a driver issue, or the particular model of your tablet is not very accurate.Īfter reading this and many other threads over /ic/ and the internet, I came to the conclusion that to draw digitally I'll start with a regular Intuos. Especially considering that you're stretching the edge of the ruler across a huge ass monitor. Rules are not perfectly straight, you know. So that might just be the surface shape of the ruler's edge itself, m8. If the cursor really did jump due to a hardware issue, you'd see an opposite trend in the lines: the lines drawn zoomed out would have very sharp irregularities, while the ones drawn zoomed in would look relatively smooth. Other than that I don't see any sharp jags like the ones in your picture. So the curves are not the result of any hardware or software error. You can see that the jags on the lines are consistent with the shape of the paper's edge, with a zoomed in line looking jaggy and the jags stretching out across the whole line as I zoom out.
I took a stack of paper, which I know doesn't have a perfectly straight edge, and I drew several lines using it, at different zoom levels. Drawing with a stabilizer actually feels like drawing with a brush, where you lead the brush with the handle. No, using a stabilizer will not impair your hand-eye coordination, and it will not make a bad artist draw good lineart. Tbh, you come off as a beginner who likes to think he's better than other people because he doesn't do X. It's actually harder to draw a circle with it, because it doesn't react well to speed, and drawing angles worth it is next to impossible. Cintiq IS the most precise device, there's nothing to argue here.Īlso, stabilizer's just a tool like any other, you use it for slow, fluid lines, and that's it. This is easily noticeable on pen displays. A tablet doesn't determine the position of the pen through its physical position in a tactile sense, the position of the actual cursor will generally oscillate around the tip of the pen to various degrees when considering the whole of the surface. >consistent across the whole surface of the tablet.