Krita wacom tablet10/14/2023 And even at that distance, 1920x1080 is just okay, so you may find the lack of sharpness straining your eyes after a while. You need to take into account that your normal monitor should be roughly twice as far from your eyes as a drawing tablet. The other thing is, 1920x1080 is a really low resolution for that size. It may be less of an issue with a display tablet, but unless you’re the kind of artist that draws more moving the forearm rather than the wrist, you might realize that you don’t really need that area and just have to move your hand a lot unless you just pan the canvas anyway. In my opinion, bigger is not automatically better, in fact I regretted getting an A4 Intuos way back (a used one anyway), it turned out out way too unwieldy, so I deliberately use a smaller one now. So do I understand that correctly that you’ve never worked with a tablet? There are pros and cons on both sides, so I am putting it out there, which tablet do you use and why is it the preferred tablet. Wacom, being the standard bearer, is more expensive than Kamvas. Wacom has the remote hot key control panel for an extra cost, the Kamvas has the hot keys built it. However, Kamvas has the laminated screen (I hear it is better for artist ) wheras Wacom only has that screen for their 24in pro which is far too expensive for me. Wacom has the pen with the various flavour nibs, and you can’t go wrong with that, whereas Kamvas has the one size fits all plastic nibs. I have found that Wacom is the standard for tablets, but Kamvas 22 has its own tablet with pluses too. Looking at all the beautiful artwork on the forum, I assume most of you are using a drawing tablet and I would like to buy one so I have researched the 21-22in tablets online. I am new to digital art and through Krita I have really come to love the medium, but I have a dilemma.
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