I made a fast decission.
I ordered the Wacom Intuos Pro Medium (the one with the size of my Sony
Vaio Laptop) 15 x 9.9 inch. I think the two-finger zoom thing (touch
screen) is very usefull for retousching, editing selections etc. And I
hope brusching clean my silver jewelry images is going to
On 31/01/2015 5:16 AM, Jens Bladt wrote:
Hi everyone
I'm doing a lot of Photoshop editing every day.
Especially jewelry shots.
I wondred if I should get a Wacom tablet and pen.
Is there a prefered model for photo editing?
I've senn a Wacom Intuos Pro S @ ebay, but I don't know if this is the
You got the right one. The medium size is the most bang for the buck
but the size is similar to how you think of monitors. More real
estate is better. Also you need the pro for the increased levels of
sensitivity to the stylus. Searching Amazon reviews (for the medium
size) for the word editing
Have you tried using a tablet before? Be aware that you may not take
to it. I'm one of those people, so far, despite a few attempts. I just
can't get the hang of avoiding registering false clicks and other
random errors.
I bought the Creative Live seminar where an expert demonstrates tablet
setup
I've not looked at the features and models Wacom currently offers. I
stopped reading the materials when the wireless Intuos5 was being
marketed so heavily. I'll share some of the things I've experienced
with older models.
1) I prefer the ergonomics of the Intuos3 tablets over the Intuos4.
The
Jens -
You might also want to check out this software. They have an excellent masking
tool and an unrestricted 30 day free trial. You do need a 64-bit OS,though.
http://www.ononesoftware.com
-p
Sent from my iPad
On Jan 31, 2015, at 7:35 AM, Jens Bladt p...@planfoto.dk wrote:
Thanks
Thanks Jostien and Attila
I allready have a very old Bamboo, but I'm not shure it works in Windows 7.
So, I have ordered the Wacom Intuos Pro.
Not too expensive at ebay. I'm sure It'll be fine for jewelry, where
removing the background is a must do ...
I try to be very accurate when it comes
On 2015-01-31 9:07 , Bruce Walker wrote:
Have you tried using a tablet before? Be aware that you may not take
to it. I'm one of those people, so far, despite a few attempts. I just
can't get the hang of avoiding registering false clicks and other
random errors.
i once spent a full year using a
On 1/31/2015 6:16 AM, Jens Bladt wrote:
Hi everyone
I'm doing a lot of Photoshop editing every day.
Especially jewelry shots.
I wondred if I should get a Wacom tablet and pen.
Is there a prefered model for photo editing?
I've senn a Wacom Intuos Pro S @ ebay, but I don't know if this is the
Hi everyone
I'm doing a lot of Photoshop editing every day.
Especially jewelry shots.
I wondred if I should get a Wacom tablet and pen.
Is there a prefered model for photo editing?
I've senn a Wacom Intuos Pro S @ ebay, but I don't know if this is the
one I want... :-)
Regards
Jens
--
PDML
I have one of the cheaper models, I believe it's a Bamboo. Set me back a few
hundred kroner, so I thought heck, I could afford to be wrong. But I like it
very much. For my simple use in photoshop anyway.
So that's what I'd recommend. Whether you like it or not, you can then make a
more informed
I have the Intuos Creative version, simpler and cheaper than the Pro.
I use it to make precise selections when the various PS tools fail to
do it automagically for me. It has a lot more precision than a mouse,
and it's also useful with the healing brush, dodging / burning. The
Pro has better
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