![]() So now I've got a portable studio with the iPad and MacBook Pro, I can literally work anywhere on anything. I used the incredibly intuitive app "Procreate" (I know, dumb name but incredible app, five stars) that uses mostly gestures to work, so it's incredibly fast and natural. Charging it takes from around ten percent per to one hundred percent–about four hours. The iPad itself lasts about a week on a charge, if used for an hour or two daily. It lasts a week or so on a charge and a charge takes about twenty minutes. The advantage it has over the Wacom is that you don't have that tiny space between your pen and the art. The pencil has replaceable tips and feels more natural than a Wacom pen, the drawback is you can't flip it over like a Wacom for erasing, but after awhile you get used to that. However it lacks the hot keys a Wacom tablet has and doesn't have a click buttons on the pencil. ![]() Compared to a Wacom tablet, the pen is so much better and not a single software issue. That's so cool–I can be in the same room as my laptop and be drawing in Photoshop or Clip Studio or Painter on my iPad without having the app on my iPad. I can do presentations on a projector directly from it, and if I use the app Astropad, I can use it as a tablet for my MacBook Pro, and/or move around the room doing a presentation. ![]() It's really a valuable asset because of all the apps available for work, from spreadsheet apps to drawing apps, the iPad is now really a light laptop and is good for most projects. I'm a graphic designer and Illustrator, I bought my IPad Pro about four months ago and have used it daily as part of my workflow, here's what I've discovered. ![]()
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