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I own a Wacom 2, 4, and 5 all in size medium. The new 5 is awesome... The touch option is useful. I also have my wheel programmed for frame by frame in PP too. The large was to big for me. Wacom has quick keys for swapping screens if you have two set up... which makes it easier for precise control... they also have an option or even finer control like when working in PS. Except for the rare track ball use, I only use my Wacom... Well I use keyboard once in while too :) |
From:
Greg Balint <greg@delrazor.com>;
To:
After Effects Mail List <AE-List@media-motion.tv>;
Subject:
Re: [AE] OT: drawing recording
Sent:
Sat, May 12, 2012 5:05:51 AM
Thanks for the info. Was about to get one soon. From the review I saw it had a ton of pros and barely any cons. I think the user did say that it had problems in mac os vs windows 7 though. Are you running on a Mac? Are you using multiple monitors?
From the specs alone, it shouldn't be having that problem.
These specs are from the review. I'm unsure which Wacom tablet they used for comparison.
Specifications: (Note that these are GREATER than Wacom's specs) 10x6.25" Working Area 1024 pressure levels 4000 LPI resolution 200 (report rate)
Specifications for Wacom's Pen Tablet: 5.8 X 3.6" working area 512 Pressure levels 1270 LPI resolution 133 (report rate)
////Greg Balint ///Art Director / Motion Graphics Designer delRAZOR.com/
On May 11, 2012, at 11:43 PM, Jeremy Silveira <JSilveira@studio601.com> wrote:
> on a side note to this I would not consider the MonoPrice tablet better than a Wacom, although they are definitely a lot cheaper. There are instances where it works just as well but I found it really hard to do precise things like adding keyframes to audio tracks in Final Cut, the cursor is really jittery when you try to move it slowly so it would always add a keyframe and then move the levels up or down at the same time which was annoying enough for me to just pay the extra money for the Wacom (which I think has been worth it) > > Jeremy Silveira > Studio 601. Inc > Gainesville, FL > 352-335-4424 x101 > www.studio601.com > > > > > On May 11, 2012, at 10:03 PM, Greg Balint wrote: > >> One other option, at least for animating the strokes, is to
have the illustrator use Corel Painter and a Wacom (or cheaper and better from what I hear, MonoPrice) digitizer tablet. Painter has a recording feature, which will record the whole illustration session and you can export it out as a high resolution QuickTime. >> >> Not sure how that would help with the hand/arm movement, but it would help with the strokes and lines.. >> >> >> ///Greg Balint >> //Art Director / Motion Graphics Designer >> /321.514.4839 >> delRAZOR.com/ >> >> >> On 5/11/2012 8:34 PM, Steve Oakley wrote: >>> ok, if you really want to do it the harder way, predraw everything, then have the hand model fake draw everything, and wipe it back in with lost of masks. painful but another approach. >> >> +---End of message---+ >> To unsubscribe send any message to <ae-list-off@media-motion.tv> > > > +---End of message---+ > To unsubscribe send any message to <ae-list-off@media-motion.tv> >
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