I use a Wacom Intuos Pro graphics tablet, but don’t want to. Because I’m used to the quality of this product, though, I can’t even use the toys that pass as art styluses for iOS an Android tablets. I’ve been thinking of switching to the Microsoft Surface Pro to avoid having to own a graphics tablet in the first place, but it turns out the iPad Pro and Apple Pencil are the bee’s knees.
Gus Mueller, creator of the popular Acorn image editor, is in the same boat as me. He’s smitten:
It feels absolutely right. Super low latency, palm rejection, and … it just works.
Is it the same as drawing in my sketchbook? No. Of course not. I’m rubbing a plastic tip across a glass screen.
It’s still God Damn Amazing though. …
I find that when using the HB Pencil in Procreate, I get something that is very, very close to what I feel when I’m drawing in my sketchbooks. But of course now I’ve got layers and many colors and a perfect eraser to work with. And endless pages. I love it. I’m drawn to it. It’s wonderful. You should absolutely try one if you haven’t already.
The problem, of course, is that you’re likely looking at a $1000 or so price tag for the cheapest iPad Pro, the Apple Pencil, Apps and tax.