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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: cintiq, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 25 of 51
1. Moho Adds Features Directly For Microsoft’s Surface Studio and Surface Dial

Animation software Moho has added support for Microsoft's Surface Studio and Surface Dial.

The post Moho Adds Features Directly For Microsoft’s Surface Studio and Surface Dial appeared first on Cartoon Brew.

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2. Microsoft’s Gorgeous Surface Studio Might Be A Cintiq Killer

Microsoft is edging into Apple and Wacom's territory with its all-in-one touchscreen desktop Surface Studio.

The post Microsoft’s Gorgeous Surface Studio Might Be A Cintiq Killer appeared first on Cartoon Brew.

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3. Japanese Artist Builds Custom Cintiq-Embedded Desk

An inspiring DIY project for anyone who creates digital art on a tablet.

The post Japanese Artist Builds Custom Cintiq-Embedded Desk appeared first on Cartoon Brew.

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4. Watch ‘Courage the Cowardly Dog’ Creator John Dilworth Animate His New Film

He's documenting the animation process of his new film through a weekly video series.

The post Watch ‘Courage the Cowardly Dog’ Creator John Dilworth Animate His New Film appeared first on Cartoon Brew.

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5. Online Premiere: ‘Driving’ by Nate Theis

Tensions build to an explosive breaking point for a group of automobile drivers in Nate Theis' satirical new short "Driving."

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6. Wacom Introduces 27-Inch Monster Cintiq

Wacom raised some eyebrows yesterday at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas when they announced a new flagship pair of tablets—the Cintiq 27QHD and the Cintiq 27QHD Touch.

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7. Johnny Appleseed Childrens Book Illustration

johnny-appleseed-ostromJohnny Appleseed Childrens Book Illustration.

This one was from a recent series of books I worked on last year. I’ve tried this look before once or twice using traditional art and a scanner but it was always a tedious process to get the lines bold enough. The Cintiq has helped make creating bold pencil lines very easy. My next goal is to start working on a more natural watercolor look.

The post Johnny Appleseed Childrens Book Illustration appeared first on Illustration.

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8. Maddy And Silvio

I just found myself with a bit more work on a contract, so I'm putting my head down and working through to the weekend to get stuff done. I'm thinking I'll be mostly offline until I catch up so I probably won't be posting again until Saturday or Sunday.

In the meantime here's a little experiment in colour I did this morning. Still working on how to approach colouring Maddy, though I think I'm nearly there. Only about eight pages left to ink now. 

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9. The Yiynova MSP19U Cintiq Alternative Swings for the Fences

frenden:

With the release of their second generation budget Cintiq alternative, Yiynova gets it right

Yiynova took on Wacom’s tablet display monopoly last year with their release of the DP10 and MSP19. I reviewed those units and they left me wanting.

The Yiynova used Waltop digitizers (digitizers being the bit of hardware that senses stylus position and pressure variance). There was significant jitter in the line quality. Creating straight lines was near impossible especially when making a deliberate, slow effort and the cursor jumped around like a ferret on meth. The display quality and fit and finish were fine, but the underlying tablet tech was a let down. My conclusion? The Waltop digitizer was junk and it let the otherwise competent hardware hanging.

After, I reviewed Monoprice’s graphics tablets. Those use UC Logic digitizers. They’re snappier in OSX than Wacom equivalents with less cursor lag and crisper fidelity in small movements. They sensed light pressure with more accuracy than any Wacom hardware I’ve owned. I was so pleased with the UC Logic based tablets that I purchased a heap of other equipment by them. I sold my Cintiq. I sold my Intuos. Eight months, four tablets and around nine styli later, I became an all UC Logic studio.

I wished that someone could pair the underlying, fantastic UC Logic digitizer tech with a tablet monitor enclosure. I even bought some hardware to try and make my own. But now I don’t have to. Yiynova must have been listening. The MSP19U is a second generation product that jettisons the inferior Waltop digitizers of the first model and replaces them with UC Logic internals.

Does the pairing live up to the sum potential of its disparate parts? Can a relatively unknown $569 tablet monitor compete with a $1999 Wacom Cintiq? Yes, it competes. It even bests the Cintiq in a few key areas. But I’m jumping ahead.

Unboxing, Specs, and the Physical Properties of the Unit

The Yiynova MSP19U is a 19,” 1440x900 tablet monitor with an adjustable, VESA-compatible stand and mounting bracket. It comes with one stylus, one battery, and several additional pen nibs. It has 2048 levels of pressure sensitivity and a 4000lpi digitizer.

The unit is light but not flimsy. Thinner than a Cintiq thanks to its LED backlighting, I find myself occasionally sitting the Yiynova in my lap like a digital art board.

At 19,” 1440x900, and 89.37 PPI, no one will mistake the Yiynova for a retina level display. It’s nearest Wacom neighbor, the 22HD, has a 22,” 1920x1080, and 100.13 PPI, screen. While the Wacom beats the Yiynova in sheer PPI, I always found the color of Cintiqs to be quite muddy thanks in part to an antiglare coating present on the monitors and dim backlighting. I went so far as to remove the glass from my Cintiq to scrape the coating off its back. It helped a little, but was still less than ideal and was not an activity for the faint of heart. Prying, scraping, and modding a $2,499 device to make it useable is a bummer and I went into a lot of detail about the shortcomings of Cintiq tech in my previous review if you want to learn more.

The LED backlighting on the Yiynova makes for a brighter overall display. It’s a little cool out of the box, but was fine once calibrated. If I had to choose between lower PPI or dimmer, muddier colors, I’d pick slightly lower PPI. This particular category is probably a draw.

The glass of the display sits above the LCD by around an 1/8th of an inch and looks to be about the same distance as my previous Cintiq. Until a manufacturer creates a unit with an iPad-like fused LCD and glass display, cursor parallax will be a concern (and is present for both the MSP19U and Cintiqs).

The stand allows for either complete verticality or nearly horizontal viewing angles and is easy to operate. Rotation is not possible, but I find it to be less of a necessity these days. Photoshop, Painter, Manga Studio, and nearly any art app worth it’s salt allow users to rotate the canvas arbitrarily.

There’s a VGA out port on the back of the monitor that will mirror the activity on your tablet to yet another external display. It’s an odd inclusion, but could be handy for making presentations or when teaching a digital art class. I do both from time to time, so it may be of some use.

Software & Hardware Installation

Setup was quick. I tested the unit on maxed 2012, 13” Macbook Air. The Air has a mini display/thunderbolt port, so an adapter was required to pair it with the Yiynova. All in, the MSP19U needs a VGA port, a wall socket, and a USB port to get rolling.

I already had UC Logic drivers installed on my system from my Monoprice tablets, so I only had to plug in the tablet to begin. The bundled driver software is the same version as the downloadable driver on the UC Logic, Panda City, and Yiynova websites, so use whatever is most convenient.

A quick note about drivers. Like with Monoprice tablets, I recommend installing drivers before plugging the tablet in, especially in Windows. Windows will install generic HID (Human Interface Device) drivers otherwise. They’re horrible and you’ll think your tablet is broken. It’s not. You’ll have to uninstall the generic HID driver from device manager, install the proper drivers, and only then plug in your tablet. This mistake accounts for five to ten support emails in my inbox a week.

Some stubborn apps enable tablet specific features (like pressure sensitivity options) only after detecting Wacom drivers present on a system. I install Intuos 3 drivers alongside any alternative tablet hardware to fool these apps into thinking a tablet is present. Painter and Illustrator are the two biggest culprits in my experience in both Win and Mac environments.

Does it work?

I tested the monitor with Photoshop CS6, Painter 12, and Manga Studio 4 and 5 in OSX and Windows. Much like the Monoprice tablets that came before, I found performance even better in OSX than Windows, but fine in both.

There are cursor calibration options in Windows, but no such options in OSX. I didn’t find cursor offset or parallax to be as bad on the Yiynova as on a Cintiq, and never found myself wanting or needing to futz with the cursor offset anyhow.

Cursor lag is similarly less pronounced on the Yiynova than a Cintiq and drawing felt more natural as a result.

A note on Paint Tool SAI. I’ve heard there are some issues running a multiple monitor setup with Paint Tool SAI, specifically, but that’s hard to blame on the Yiynova. SAI has been largely abandonware for some time, and it’s starting to show. I recommend using Clip Paint/Manga Studio 5. It’s a bit like a mashup of SAI, Painter, and Photoshop, and has largely replaced all those other apps in my workflow. My Windows box is a single monitor setup, so I was unable to verify these reports.

The drawing surface is slicker than that of a Cintiq and took a little getting used to. I found that long, deliberate lines could sometimes wobble a bit as my stylus tip slid on the glass, but it was a user limitation, not a failure of the digitizer panel.

Viewing angles on the monitor are worse than a Cintiq, but brightness is better. Viewing angles never veered into unusable territory, but the resolution and viewing angles of the LCD are the single largest area I’d like to see improved in the future.

Bottom line? Is it perfect? No. Are Cintiqs? No.

The Cintiq 22HD costs $1999. It has a slightly laggier feel to drawing, but a higher resolution display and has programmable hotkeys. It’s heavy and cumbersome. At the time of writing, the Yiynova MSP19U costs $569. It has a superior drawing experience in terms of lag and cursor offset to my eye, but a lower quality display and no hotkeys. It’s light and easier to move around a desk or sit in your lap.

Even without the price disparity, I would opt for the MSP19U. Cursor lag was the single biggest complaint I could muster against the Cintiqs and I think the 19U is the winner there. How well it draws trumps how good the image looks for me every time.

But, price matters and we should talk about it. The 19U costs 72% less than the Cintiq 22HD and 77% less than the 24HD. Even if it were marginally worse in all regards – and I find it neither heads and shoulders above or below, simply different – it would still be a steal.

My 19U is now a permanent member of the household. I don’t plan on, or feel the need to, replace it with a Cintiq.

Wacom has genuine competition on both the tablet and tablet monitor fronts. Spread the word. Make them feel some heat. There’s no reason this technology should be so expensive. The underlying hardware has been largely stagnant for a decade with no real innovation.

At $569, and with performance that often meets or exceeds Wacom’s hardware, the MSP19U is more than a viable alternative. It’s the disruptive agent of change the industry needs.

Buy the MSP19U using my Amazon affiliate link if you want to support my efforts to test digital art hardware.

Lastly, I want to thank you all. There have been more than 34,000 reblogs of my Monoprice review on Tumblr alone. UC Logic digitizers are a known quantity in the tablet space now and it’s thanks to you.

Another splendid and thorough graphics tablet review by Ray Frenden. This time it’s the Cintiq alternative, the Yiynova MSP19U.

0 Comments on The Yiynova MSP19U Cintiq Alternative Swings for the Fences as of 12/24/2012 6:37:00 PM
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10. Wacom Announces the Cintiq 24HD

Wacom 24HD

As someone who lives in a Cintiq household, I know well how highly this is anticipated. Wacom made the official announcement today for their Cintiq 24HD. The first thing one notices is the sexy new counterweighted stand that allows for adjustable height and angling of the screen. Here are some of the key under-the-hood specs:

* 1920 x 1200 HD display
* 178° viewing angle
* 16:10 aspect ratio
* 550:1 contrast ratio
* 2048 levels of pen pressure and 40° of tilt
* Featuring Wacom’s new Tip Sensor
* DVI-I and DisplayPort connectors
* Weight: 63.8 pounds
* Price: $2,499

And here’s a video of a sophisticated and serious artist (clearly not an animator) using the beast:


Cartoon Brew: Leading the Animation Conversation | Permalink | 4 comments | Post tags: , ,

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11. Bo!


A drawing I did of Bo Diddley with a brushpen and coloured in Photoshop. I love Bo Diddley! And he seems like a really cool guy. If you don't know his stuff listen here.

Julie's finally finished up report card at the school she's teaching at, which frees up time for me! It's been frustrating balancing things with her so busy. But things are getting back to normal in that regard.

We're actually all leaving on a road-trip in a few weeks, back to Halifax for the Summer. I have a studio there so I'm hoping the disruption will be pretty minimal.

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12. The Seadragon

A little sketch for a future project I'm writing in some quiet moments. Something that explores things like science, cold war intrigue, Canadian geography... All in a adventure story. Maybe not something I can get to any time soon but when you have an idea you have to run with it for a bit to see what it's all about.

Currently working on Maddy Kettle pencils, the process is starting to speed up a bit but I want to make sure the whole book is high quality so I'm trying to be careful...

2 Comments on The Seadragon, last added: 6/29/2011
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13. The Mouse

Just finished the first Fanatagraphics collection of Floyd Gottfredson Mickey Mouse adventure stories and I'm bowled over. I just love them. Great drawings, great stories and a rollicking cartoon adventure. It's so great to read fun comic books. Even if they are 80 odd years old. Grab this book for yourself!

I drew this with a Japanese brushpen and a Cintiq.

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14. Melvin Monster

I'm knee deep in scanning artwork right now so I did this little sketch yesterday in between scans. Melvin Monster is an amazing 60s comic book by John Stanley, who I think is one of the best writer/artists of kids comics ever. Very funny with great characters. And his comics have a little edge, which I like.You can see some of his comics here.

I'll continue my tools and materials posts on Monday, I need to get caught up on writing those posts.

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15. Hector The Burrowing Owl, New Maddy Kettle Character

Hector appears on page four of the first Maddy Kettle book and doesn't talk or really do anything but I love to name every creature that appears, just in case. He lives in the Arizona dessert.

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16. Shadow Talker Page One

Here is the first and only page I finished for the Shadow Talker webcomic I had planned to do this Spring. This page took about five days to do and I soon realized it would be a total disaster to devote myself to this project as well as Maddy Kettle, financially. So I shelved it more or less, I've been continuing to write it and even considering doing it as a middle grade novel. I think the core idea and story are really good and I'd love to tell the story in some way.

This is also the first fully digital comic page I've ever done. I penciled it on one layer and inked it in successive layers.

15 Comments on Shadow Talker Page One, last added: 4/12/2011
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17. Full Of Candy

Post Halloween exhaustion! Candy crash! A new portfolio piece! Again, this one's pencil and digital. My confidence with this process is really growing. I've said it before but I have to say it again, this process really helps me do the exact kind of pictures I want. I've always wanted to be able to produce work that shows my drawing prominently but is richly coloured. I couldn't fully pull this off using ink and watercolour or pencil and watercolour because the paint would inevitably hide much of my linework. This has been driving me crazy for years. So, this is closer to what I've had in my head.

What I do is; take these very finished pencil drawings and scan them in. I rework them extensively on the Cintiq using Photoshop (CS4). Reworking the black and white drawing. Mainly I lighten it up with white lines. Part of my preferred technique has always been to go too dark in the initial drawing and then recover the highlights. In the past I've white ink, gouache or acrylic to achieve this. It's much easier using the Cintiq and very easy to correct. I also play with curves quite a bit to get the exposure just right.

I than duplicate the background drawing in another layer and set the blending option to multiply (I think... ) All the colour work is sandwiched between the two layers. This method keeps the colour beneath the linework, so that nothing gets lost beneath the colouring. It's like having two layers of clear paper and the line drawing is sitting on top of the colours, if that makes sense. (I use a lot more than two layers but you get the idea) Each layer of colour is set to a different opacity, I'm going for a slightly washed out look, not overly intense but with moments of richness. This process is just an extension of my traditional work so the learning curve has been pretty gentle.

And if you're wondering this is a bit of an homage to Maurice Sendak.

7 Comments on Full Of Candy, last added: 4/8/2011
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18. New Stuff


Two new pieces I did for my portfolio. I'm trying to get a few simple pieces with children before I move on to more elaborate ones connected to some book proposals I'm working on.

9 Comments on New Stuff, last added: 4/5/2011
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19. Sick Day


On the weekend Henry had a fever and was just generally sick. So Monday I kept him home. I managed to get lots of work done, surprisingly, but the best parts of the day were hanging out with Henry. Going for a walk just before the rain arrived, drawing on the Cintiq. Henry's all better now but of course I have a cough. Koff koff.....

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20. Marching With The Grass

Another new portfolio piece, also done with pencil and digital-a technique I'm warming to more and more. I'm trying to get a done a number of smaller, graphically simpler pieces done for my portfolio, something I don't have enough of. I think these simple images are pretty popular with art directors and readers. And I love doing them, the restraint is worth it.

11 Comments on Marching With The Grass, last added: 3/29/2011
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21. Free Brushes!


The brushes that come with Photoshop are great. The get the job done. But there are a lot of free brushes available for download online as well, usually created for artists for other artists. Very cool. These were done with brushes created by Chris Wahl.

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22. Sky Process

So, a bit on this piece and how I did it. It's not an especially original process but it's a pretty individual one. Combining pencil and digital lets you have a real individual touch and have a really polished piece. Above is the original pencil drawing which I scanned in. I was pretty happy with it but had some issues with it.
And below here is the piece after I had played with it digitally. (To see the final colour version click here) I can be a bit of a perfectionist so I find I had to make sure I didn't go overboard. I didn't do a lot to the original but the combination of Cintiq and Photoshop is pretty powerful and a little goes a long way. It's surprisingly how quickly you can work this way.

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23. Grass Thing

Thanks so much for all the kind comments on yesterdays new portfolio piece. Here's a new one I'm working on, or rather a sketch for one. I plan to add about 5 or 6 new pieces before relaunching my website. I'm really loving the possibilities I'm finding combing paper, pencil and digital. I have to say, it's giving me the tools to do things I've always wanted to but couldn't.

6 Comments on Grass Thing, last added: 3/25/2011
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24. Watching The Sky

This is a new portfolio piece, the first in a long time. It was nice to do something just for my portfolio. I find it necessary to go back and tweak my portfolio quite often because it represents the kind of work you want to do, so you can do work just to guide it toward representing your current work. I have planned a few simple pieces like this.

I did this in pencil and digital, something I'll be exploring a lot more, I think. I found this a pretty amazing and fast way to work.

21 Comments on Watching The Sky, last added: 3/25/2011
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25. Plump

More sketches from a picture book project. I'm playing with importing pencil drawings into the computer and playing with them digitally. Liking the results so far. It's the weekend which means a precarious juggling of work and Henry. At the moment I'm trying to get more projects lined up over the next year.

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