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Last updated Friday, June 2, 2017 Intuos Draw review: best Wacom for beginners & back-to-basics users The Wacom Intuos Draw is the most basic of the Intuos graphics tablets line and the only Intuos that does not have multitouch capability. That means you can only use the pen on it; you won’t be able to use hand gestures such as pinch or zoom. This Wacom Intuos Draw review is of the Small size, the only size it comes in. The Draw not as basic as Wacom’s Bamboo signature pads, which don’t have a lot of art features.
It’s the simplest of their graphics tablets. This makes it a good drawing tablet for beginners who might not need multitouch, and want something affordable. If you just prefer or require a straightforward graphics tablet that has Wacom quality without much learning curve, the Intuos Draw might be for you. Features: Type of tablet: Graphics tablet, Wacom EMR digitizer 1,024 levels of pressure sensitivity No multitouch no tilt/angle or rotation sensitivity Size: 8.25 x 6.7″ Active area: 6.0 x 3.7 in(152 x 95 mm) Right and left-handed use Colors: white or mint blue Size: Small only Weight: about 10 oz. (290 ±50g) Resolution: 2540 lpi Reading Speed (pen): 133pps What’s in the Box Intuos Draw (small) Intuos Pen Charger Nibs (3 extra, total 4) CD with driver and manual documentation Inside the outer sleeve is a high-quality, nonflimsy black cardboard box that offers solid protection for shipping. The art software that’s included has to be downloaded. Intuos Draw and what it comes with: pen, CD, USB cord, documentation You can use the CD, which has the driver, if you have a CD drive, or you can download the driver from Wacom. I always prefer to download regardless, in case there has been an update.
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Intuos Draw art software: ArtRage Lite examples The Draw will work with any art program, including Photoshop and all software, and gets pressure sensitivity in Adobe Illustrator. It’s fine for Mac and Windows. Wacom includes some free art software with all its tablets, a different program depending on the model. The current offering, which I did these doodles in, is. The Intuos package includes a code to type in to get the free art software and other offers from the Wacom site. In addition to ArtRage Lite, an offer for 30-day subscription to software courses, and an offer for a free photo print on metal.
Wacom also offers access to online art tutorials on its own site. The offers change from time to time, so check when you buy the tablet. Though there are free art programs you can get online, I really enjoy ArtRage, which has a lot of fun brushes and effects, some of which you can see in the above doodles.
These include glitter, oil, pastel, palette knife, and roller. It’s a really easy and intuitive program, and is inexpensive to buy the full version from ArtRage (they have a free demo version, too). These perks are a good incentive to stick with Wacom, especially with their entry-level drawing tablets such as this.
Build and features. Clever place to store the extra nibs, eh? And the thing on the left is a pen loop. The back compartment stores the extra nibs.
Below the nibs, that little circle is the nib remover where you insert the pen with nib and it pulls it out painlessly. The two compartments around the nibs are for the optional Wi-fi kit parts.
The micro-USB fits snugly and securely into the tablet’s side. On the upper right corner of the tablet is a small security lock slot for a Kensington lock or pen tether.
It’s marked with a small lock icon. The tablet top has a neat little canvas pen loop you can put your pen in. The loop fits snugly and you have to put the pen in starting with the pen’s back end. The small dots on the surface show the active area, which is mappable, meaning you can use just part of it if you want. Mapping is useful if you want to work without moving your hand a lot. Using just a small part of the tablet, a small movement will go a long way.
You set the mapping function in the driver. Though the Intuos Draw looks almost toylike, it’s not a toy. It’s fairly well built for something so light, though I wouldn’t want to drop it hard, because the outer case doesn’t seem super protective. I found myself gently handling the detachable pieces such as the back cover. The tablet has lots of good Wacom features, such as getting pressure sensitivity in Adobe Illustrator, and it’s got good old Wacom EMR, the most sensitive type of Wacom digitizer.
If you’ve got a multiple monitor setup, the Intuos Draw might be too small to effectively cover all the pixels needed. Otherwise, it should work on most setups, even with a large monitor. Intuos Pen The pen has two programmable buttons that you can program for just as many things as you can the Express Keys. It has no eraser tip. It’s batteryless, lightweight, and comfortable to hold.
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It’s smaller and lighter than the Pro Pen or other Wacom pens meant to be used on the higher-end Intuos Pros. I weighed it and it’s only 9 grams, so light it almost feels like a drinking straw. That’s about half the weight of a typical active pen (battery included for those that take batteries) and may be too light for people who like the steady balance of a heavier pen, but I don’t mind it. Drawing on the.