Du hast noch kein Thema im Forum kommentiert.
 
Hier kommen die 3 letzten Forenthemen, 
die du kommentiert hast.
+ Neuer Shout
Anonym
habt ein schönes wochenende
0 | 0 | 0 | 0
0%
Um im Forum mitreden zu können, musst du angemeldet sein.Noch kein Mitglied?
Klicke hier, um deinen eigenen kostenlosen Account zu erstellen oder Virtual Popstar auf Facebook zu spielen:




> Schließen
Helper
9 von 24 Sternen erreicht

Forum

Allgemein < Allgemein Erste | Zurück | Seite: | Nächste | Letzte Seite
iPad Stift ???
Phyx
Youtube Star



der mit abstand beste wird immer der apple pencil bleiben, werde mir den auch kaufen, wenn ich mein ipadpro habe
leider ist er nur mit dem ipad pro kompatibel und auch nicht gerade billig

hier sind noch ein paar alternativen, einfach mal durchstöbern und sich rezensionen auf amazon durchlesen

besonders interessant finde ich ja auch die "stifte" im pinsel format :'D


www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/features/creative-hardware/10-ipad-styluses-for-artists-designers-wha...
Anonym
Popstar



Phyx Schrieb:
der mit abstand beste wird immer der apple pencil bleiben, werde mir den auch kaufen, wenn ich mein ipadpro habe
leider ist er nur mit dem ipad pro kompatibel und auch nicht gerade billig

hier sind noch ein paar alternativen, einfach mal durchstöbern und sich rezensionen auf amazon durchlesen

besonders interessant finde ich ja auch die "stifte" im pinsel format :'D


www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/features/creative-hardware/10-ipad-styluses-for-artists-designers-wha...

jap, der ist mit meinem sowieso nicht kompatibel und mir acuh sowieso zu teuer. XD

ah danke schön :d habe auch schon gegoogelt gehabt, aber da kamen irgendwie immer dieselben bei rum ^^
Finde ich auch interessant, ziemlich seltsam eigentlich :d
Anonym
Weltberühmt



Phyx Schrieb:
der mit abstand beste wird immer der apple pencil bleiben, werde mir den auch kaufen, wenn ich mein ipadpro habe
leider ist er nur mit dem ipad pro kompatibel und auch nicht gerade billig

hier sind noch ein paar alternativen, einfach mal durchstöbern und sich rezensionen auf amazon durchlesen

besonders interessant finde ich ja auch die "stifte" im pinsel format :'D


www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/features/creative-hardware/10-ipad-styluses-for-artists-designers-wha...
Apple pen... 
Anonym
Popstar



@phyx: die seite lädt bei mir leider nicht richtig, schade aber auch...
Phyx
Youtube Star



Taistelija Schrieb:
Phyx Schrieb:
der mit abstand beste wird immer der apple pencil bleiben, werde mir den auch kaufen, wenn ich mein ipadpro habe
leider ist er nur mit dem ipad pro kompatibel und auch nicht gerade billig

hier sind noch ein paar alternativen, einfach mal durchstöbern und sich rezensionen auf amazon durchlesen

besonders interessant finde ich ja auch die "stifte" im pinsel format :'D


www.digitalartsonline.co.uk/features/creative-hardware/10-ipad-styluses-for-artists-designers-wha...
Apple pen... 
wasn
Phyx
Youtube Star



melind Schrieb:
@phyx: die seite lädt bei mir leider nicht richtig, schade aber auch...
echt nicht? seltsam
Phyx
Youtube Star



melind Schrieb:
@phyx: die seite lädt bei mir leider nicht richtig, schade aber auch...

Wacom Intuos Creative Stylus 2
Available for £60, Wacom's Intuos Creative Stylus 2 is aimed at those who don't want to shell out for one of Wacom's Cintiq Companions but has an iPad at their disposal. It gives you the tip sensitivity of a Cintiq pen – that's 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivity – and the professional, lightweight feel shared by other Wacom stylus products.
Link it up to your iPad Mini, iPad or iPad Air through Bluetooth 4.0 and you've got a ready-made Cintiq, to all intents and purposes. Note that the iPad Air 2 is not fully supported, as is the case with most Bluetooth-connected styluses at present.
Carry your stylus securely in the neat included case, which contains a nib-removal tool, a replacement nib and a USB charger that connects to the micro USB port hidden at the end of the pen. Wacom claims the battery lasts up to 26 hours.
This second generation of the stylus has a much smaller and more precise tip and better palm rejection, and works with apps including several of Adobe's appsArtRageAstropadAutodesk appsProcreate and more (though not all fully support palm rejection).


Adobe Ink & Slide
Adobe has introduced its own stylus called the Ink, which comes with a companion in the form of a ruler called Slide. Ink & Slide are designed to be used with the iPad and four free creative iPad apps: Adobe Illustrator Line, Illustrator Draw, Photoshop Sketch and Brush CC.
The stylish, aluminium tools represent the first hardware devices from Adobe, created in partnership with Adonit. What's cool about Ink & Slide is their connection with Creative Cloud. Ink can be used to copy and paste images via the cloud, sending sketches to Photoshop or Illustrator on your desktop for further refinement later.
Slide can be used to draw straight lines, as you might expect, but touch-based buttons on the surface also allow you to draw precise circles, French curves and more.
As with the Wacom stylus, the Adobe Ink and Slide are not currently fully compatible with the iPad Air 2 - and it is not compatible with the iPad Pro. 


Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus
A less expensive option designed with painting in mind is the Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus. It's not Bluetooth connected or pressure sensitive like the Creative Stylus 2 or Adobe Ink, but it only costs around £30 and is actually really cool.
It's different from many of the other styluses we've seen because it takes the form of a paintbrush. That brush has metallic particles embedded into its bristles to make it conductive. There's also a rubber-tipped stylus at the opposite end, too.
Find out more about the Sensu Brush in our Sensu Brush iPad paintbrush review by artist Pete Fowler.
If you like the idea of the Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus but aren't bothered about the rubber tip, you can get the slightly cheaper Sensu Solo that only includes the brush end. Plus it comes in five rather nice colour options and has a handle that's shaped like a traditional paintbrush.


Adonit Jot Dash
Adonit, which is the company behind some of the tech found in Adobe's Ink stylus, also offers its own range of popular and well-built styli. The Jot range includes Jot Dash, Jot Touch, Jot Script 2, Jot Pro and Jot Mini.
With a thin, 8.5mm diameter, the Jot Dash feels and acts like a standard ink pen - and has a matching (well, closer) price at around £30. Press its end to turn it on, like a retractable ballpoint, and you have a 1.9mm plastic tip to play with. 
Without Bluetooth - which enables pressure sensitivity and palm rejection - the Jot Dash is also closer to a pen’s tech level than other styluses. But the lack of fiddly features means it works with any drawing or note-taking apps, as well as both iOS and Android touch screens - including, notably, the iPad Air 2.
Its aluminium barrel comes in a pretty range of charcoal, silver, gold or rose gold. Charging it is also neat: just slide a small frame, with a magnetic pen stand, into a USB port. It recharges in 45 minutes and lasts for up to 14 hours. 



Adonit Jot Pro
The favourite from the Jot family tends to be the Adonit Jot Pro, which doesn't require a Bluetooth connection to work. It uses a transparent disk to protect your iPad from the very precise tip for ultimate accuracy.
Like the Jot Dash, it is made from lightweight aluminium, comes in range of colours – copper, black, silver, gold and rose gold – and has a handy carrying clip. At 9.5mm in diameter, it is slightly wider that the Jot Dash.


Ten One Pogo Connect 2
Another Bluetooth connected stylus now, this one from Ten One Design. You should be able to pick one up for £45, so it's quite a bit cheaper than Wacom and Adobe's offerings. You might spend additional cash if you want the magnetically replaceable nibs, though.
The basic Pogo Connect comes with a standard rubber tip, but there are additional tips available including note-taking tips, precision tips, a premium brush tip, straight brush tip and angled brush tip, all of which are pressure sensitive.


Nomad iPad brushes
Similar to the Sensu Brush are Nomad's range of capacitive brushes for iPad. They're not the best-looking gadgets in the world, but they each have brush tips that make creating virtual paintings on an iPad feel much more like painting with real paint.
The Nomad brushes each cost around £25 (although you'll find some for as little as £10 on Amazon), and options include Nomad Compose with two types of brush tip, Nomad Flex with a more flexible brush tip and the Nomad Mini 2 with a retractable brush on one end and a rubber stylus on the other.

Anonym
Popstar



Phyx Schrieb:
melind Schrieb:
@phyx: die seite lädt bei mir leider nicht richtig, schade aber auch...

Wacom Intuos Creative Stylus 2
Available for £60, Wacom's Intuos Creative Stylus 2 is aimed at those who don't want to shell out for one of Wacom's Cintiq Companions but has an iPad at their disposal. It gives you the tip sensitivity of a Cintiq pen – that's 2,048 levels of pressure sensitivity – and the professional, lightweight feel shared by other Wacom stylus products.
Link it up to your iPad Mini, iPad or iPad Air through Bluetooth 4.0 and you've got a ready-made Cintiq, to all intents and purposes. Note that the iPad Air 2 is not fully supported, as is the case with most Bluetooth-connected styluses at present.
Carry your stylus securely in the neat included case, which contains a nib-removal tool, a replacement nib and a USB charger that connects to the micro USB port hidden at the end of the pen. Wacom claims the battery lasts up to 26 hours.
This second generation of the stylus has a much smaller and more precise tip and better palm rejection, and works with apps including several of Adobe's appsArtRageAstropadAutodesk appsProcreate and more (though not all fully support palm rejection).


Adobe Ink & Slide
Adobe has introduced its own stylus called the Ink, which comes with a companion in the form of a ruler called Slide. Ink & Slide are designed to be used with the iPad and four free creative iPad apps: Adobe Illustrator Line, Illustrator Draw, Photoshop Sketch and Brush CC.
The stylish, aluminium tools represent the first hardware devices from Adobe, created in partnership with Adonit. What's cool about Ink & Slide is their connection with Creative Cloud. Ink can be used to copy and paste images via the cloud, sending sketches to Photoshop or Illustrator on your desktop for further refinement later.
Slide can be used to draw straight lines, as you might expect, but touch-based buttons on the surface also allow you to draw precise circles, French curves and more.
As with the Wacom stylus, the Adobe Ink and Slide are not currently fully compatible with the iPad Air 2 - and it is not compatible with the iPad Pro. 


Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus
A less expensive option designed with painting in mind is the Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus. It's not Bluetooth connected or pressure sensitive like the Creative Stylus 2 or Adobe Ink, but it only costs around £30 and is actually really cool.
It's different from many of the other styluses we've seen because it takes the form of a paintbrush. That brush has metallic particles embedded into its bristles to make it conductive. There's also a rubber-tipped stylus at the opposite end, too.
Find out more about the Sensu Brush in our Sensu Brush iPad paintbrush review by artist Pete Fowler.
If you like the idea of the Sensu Artist Brush & Stylus but aren't bothered about the rubber tip, you can get the slightly cheaper Sensu Solo that only includes the brush end. Plus it comes in five rather nice colour options and has a handle that's shaped like a traditional paintbrush.


Adonit Jot Dash
Adonit, which is the company behind some of the tech found in Adobe's Ink stylus, also offers its own range of popular and well-built styli. The Jot range includes Jot Dash, Jot Touch, Jot Script 2, Jot Pro and Jot Mini.
With a thin, 8.5mm diameter, the Jot Dash feels and acts like a standard ink pen - and has a matching (well, closer) price at around £30. Press its end to turn it on, like a retractable ballpoint, and you have a 1.9mm plastic tip to play with. 
Without Bluetooth - which enables pressure sensitivity and palm rejection - the Jot Dash is also closer to a pen’s tech level than other styluses. But the lack of fiddly features means it works with any drawing or note-taking apps, as well as both iOS and Android touch screens - including, notably, the iPad Air 2.
Its aluminium barrel comes in a pretty range of charcoal, silver, gold or rose gold. Charging it is also neat: just slide a small frame, with a magnetic pen stand, into a USB port. It recharges in 45 minutes and lasts for up to 14 hours. 



Adonit Jot Pro
The favourite from the Jot family tends to be the Adonit Jot Pro, which doesn't require a Bluetooth connection to work. It uses a transparent disk to protect your iPad from the very precise tip for ultimate accuracy.
Like the Jot Dash, it is made from lightweight aluminium, comes in range of colours – copper, black, silver, gold and rose gold – and has a handy carrying clip. At 9.5mm in diameter, it is slightly wider that the Jot Dash.


Ten One Pogo Connect 2
Another Bluetooth connected stylus now, this one from Ten One Design. You should be able to pick one up for £45, so it's quite a bit cheaper than Wacom and Adobe's offerings. You might spend additional cash if you want the magnetically replaceable nibs, though.
The basic Pogo Connect comes with a standard rubber tip, but there are additional tips available including note-taking tips, precision tips, a premium brush tip, straight brush tip and angled brush tip, all of which are pressure sensitive.


Nomad iPad brushes
Similar to the Sensu Brush are Nomad's range of capacitive brushes for iPad. They're not the best-looking gadgets in the world, but they each have brush tips that make creating virtual paintings on an iPad feel much more like painting with real paint.
The Nomad brushes each cost around £25 (although you'll find some for as little as £10 on Amazon), and options include Nomad Compose with two types of brush tip, Nomad Flex with a more flexible brush tip and the Nomad Mini 2 with a retractable brush on one end and a rubber stylus on the other.


ohaaa danke! lese mir das mal grad durch
Anonym
Popstar



fnde ja immer, die sehn aus wie geräte vom zahnarzt. XDDDD

Anonym
Popstar



der  Adonit Jot Dash  klingt gut, suche gerad nach amazon rezensionen. xD will hatl eig kin gummiding, da die sich eig recht schnell abnutzen (haben bei unserem familien ipad so einen) und habe gehört, dass diese anderen von adonit mit der kleinen platte am stift ständig hörbar klackern, wenn man damit aufs ipad draufkommt xD
Phyx
Youtube Star



melind Schrieb:
der  Adonit Jot Dash  klingt gut, suche gerad nach amazon rezensionen. xD will hatl eig kin gummiding, da die sich eig recht schnell abnutzen (haben bei unserem familien ipad so einen) und habe gehört, dass diese anderen von adonit mit der kleinen platte am stift ständig hörbar klackern, wenn man damit aufs ipad draufkommt xD
das ding ist, all die touchpens sind auch nur fingerattrappen, sie haben keine besonderen funktionen ich glaube auch keine druckempfindlichkeit. Deshalb würde ich sagen, dass es ein billiger stift auch macht. Der muss halt nur kompatibel mit den Apps fürs Zeichnen sein und gut in der Hand liegen

Der Apple Pen ist der einzige, der halt spezifisch auf das ipad zugeschnitten wurde und daher druckempfindlichkeit, hohe präzision, winkelabhängigkeit, etc. bietet
Anonym
Weltberühmt



also ich würde mir an deiner stelle den Apple Pencil holen. Etwas genaueres wirst du für das iPad nicht finden (und ne gute App)
welches ipad hast du?
Phyx
Youtube Star



MsSuicideSheep Schrieb:
also ich würde mir an deiner stelle den Apple Pencil holen. Etwas genaueres wirst du für das iPad nicht finden (und ne gute App)
welches ipad hast du?
sie hat 'n ipad air ://
Anonym
Weltberühmt



Phyx Schrieb:
MsSuicideSheep Schrieb:
also ich würde mir an deiner stelle den Apple Pencil holen. Etwas genaueres wirst du für das iPad nicht finden (und ne gute App)
welches ipad hast du?
sie hat 'n ipad air ://
verkaufen, ipad pro holen XD einfachste Lösung auf alle Probleme
Account gelöscht




Phyx Schrieb:
melind Schrieb:
der  Adonit Jot Dash  klingt gut, suche gerad nach amazon rezensionen. xD will hatl eig kin gummiding, da die sich eig recht schnell abnutzen (haben bei unserem familien ipad so einen) und habe gehört, dass diese anderen von adonit mit der kleinen platte am stift ständig hörbar klackern, wenn man damit aufs ipad draufkommt xD
das ding ist, all die touchpens sind auch nur fingerattrappen, sie haben keine besonderen funktionen ich glaube auch keine druckempfindlichkeit. Deshalb würde ich sagen, dass es ein billiger stift auch macht. Der muss halt nur kompatibel mit den Apps fürs Zeichnen sein und gut in der Hand liegen

Der Apple Pen ist der einzige, der halt spezifisch auf das ipad zugeschnitten wurde und daher druckempfindlichkeit, hohe präzision, winkelabhängigkeit, etc. bietet
Der von wacom hat druckstufen
Schreibe einen Kommentar
Kommentieren
Automatisch aktualisieren: Eingeschaltet
Erste | Zurück | Seite: | Nächste | Letzte Seite