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Sketchbook pro artwork
Sketchbook pro artwork











It's to the point you can never get a sense of trust when reading their reviews of technology because they are either undeniably ignorant to the vast majority of apps they review have long been available to android devices as well as old school winmo devices for years, and of numerous flavors, or they are willfully blind. I am waiting for the day for this hellish existence of being a newish tech Blogger and it never ceasing to amaze me how profoundly loyal Apple end users are to their benevolent Jobs. If you like to draw and have an iPad, you need this software. $79.99 for the Windows/Mac desktop version. And SketchBook Pro, like many iPad apps, is a bizarrely good value–it’s $4.99, vs. Even so, once you get the hang of drawing with one of the blunt, non-pressure-sensitive styluses that are available–I like this one–it’s addictive. The iPad isn’t my dream digital art device, mostly because its technology doesn’t allow for anyone to build a pointy, pressure-sensitive stylus of the sort you can use with a Wacom tablet. There’s also a SketchBook Store that lets you download and install additional drawing tools, such as fancy pencils.

sketchbook pro artwork

And while I haven’t tried this yet, Autodesk says the app is better at sharing images with the Windows, Mac, iPhone, and Android versions of the program. You can shuttle files back and forth using Dropbox. On the iPad 2, it supports a high-resolution 2048-by-1536 canvas. The user interface is much improved over the original version that shipped the same day as the first iPad–for instance, you can pin toolbars to the sides of the screen. Of the ones I’ve tried, my favorite is Autodesk’s SketchBook Pro–and it just got an extremely meaty upgrade to version 2.0.

sketchbook pro artwork

The iPad is blessed with several excellent apps for drawing and painting using tools that mimic the look of real art supplies.













Sketchbook pro artwork