Yes, you can use a tablet on ms paint, although there will be no pen pressure. A tablet basically works just like a mouse, so if you can draw in ms paint with a mouse, you can also draw in it with a tablet. c:
Wacom has been an industry name for some time now, having first entered the tablet peripheral game in 1992 and capturing the lion’s share (over 80% in both Japan and abroad) of the market ever since.By using a resonance technology between pen stylus and receiving tablet, Wacom tablets allow a design which is lighter and lower-profile, meaning that since the pen does not have to accommodate batteries, it can actually have the free weight of the real deal. This can make a big difference during extended drawing sessions.What is the Wacom Bamboo series of tablet and how might it be useful to me?The Bamboo series of tablets from Wacom are the user-level or home-use level of products which can start under $99 for multiple versions -- more inexpensive versions with a simple pen and stylus set (the Connect or Splash models) and a few more expensive models which may feature multi-touch (that same nifty functionality your tablet PC has) as well as a pen-bound eraser (the Capture and Create models).By connecting the Wacom tablets to a standard PC via USB (or Bluetooth, if you opt to skip the Bamboo line completely and buy an Intuos model) and installing the drivers included, users will immediately open a great many functionalities to their computing experience.What can I do with a Wacom tablet?After the Bamboo successfully installs, there will often be a few introductory tutorials featuring the pack-in software, whether it be ArtRage Studio 3 or a simpler tool. Keep in mind that the pen style is pressure sensitive -- if you draw “harder” it will draw a thicker, less transparent line!It will get a bit of getting used to in order to control the stylus and the tablet surface. A few simple tips to offer might be:Remember that since the stylus uses a resonance feature, in order to track the pen the tip must be held slightly over the drawing surface. This will allow you to keep track of where your pen tip is as well as to use the pen to navigate (pan and scroll) the drawing area.In order to perform document markup or to provide signatures, you’ll need a word processor first. OpenOffice or Word should do the trick. After you’ve opened the document you’d like to edit, and you’ve placed the cursor in an area you’d like to mark up, make sure the tablet is active / online. By using the proprietary Bamboo software, activate the stylus through the system tray and review tab and draw away! This process is called “turning ink on”.Unless you bought the high-end Bamboo, remember, the pen doesn’t come with an eraser on the other end, so you’ll have to select an erasure tool!Of course, while document markup is a big part of the appeal of this product for architects, carpenters and other blueprint workers, researchers and academics, the primary appeal of this product is to visual artists. Drawing in Corel Paint Shop Pro, Adobe Photoshop, and other programs (such as the included software) is remarkably seamless in terms of integration.Inklinks, a proprietary software tool, facilitates this process. This means that artists can start commissioning work on oDesk and eLance within minutes of having installed the Wacom device and begin earning money as freelancers immediately. It might be as easy as it sounds, though it is entirely within the realm of possibility.Get sketching, start producing a portfolio, edit those documents for class, and annotate those PDFs with notes as well as a final signature just to make the whole thing official. For well under $99, the Wacom Bamboo tablet line is a deal that should be scrutinized by every visual artist and graphic designer out there as imagery and image creation moves into the 21st century, largely leaving paper behind.
Drivers? At the Wacom website.Commercial art applications? At the respective websites for: Adobe (Photoshop, Illustrator, Flash, Freehand), Corel (Painter, Paint Shop Pro), PortalGraphics (Open Canvas), Autodesk (Sketchbook), etc. Sometimes there may also be special promotional or package deals that include such applications with the purchase of the tablet.Shareware applications: Project Dogwaffle, etc.Open Source applications: GIMP.org, Paint.net, Inkscape, etc.
Yes.
First off, you must download the tablet driver onto your computer (that should be included as a CD with your tablet when you buy it). This will help calibrate your tablet to your computer and activate features like pen pressure that could be helpful later on. If the CD is not included with your tablet, drivers can be found on the wacom website. Make sure you download the correct driver for your tablet.Then you should get a drawing software like Paint Tool SAI, Photoshopor if you are unable to acquire those, use the software program that came with your tablet.It takes time to get used to your tablet. Make sure to practice a lot and you'll drawing like a pro in no time!
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By using silk to make bamboo and a paint brush to write.
digeridoos are made by cuting a bamboo tree , then cuting the inside out and then you paint it the way aboriginals do it
Check, Help/config > options. pressure should be at 0%. if not, your tablet pressure is not setted. IF 0% and not working, check the density, still not, your tablet pressure is not working all together, or not on sai.
Tall, squared vases are usually best for bamboo sticks. Any color of vase can be used and you can even paint the bamboo sticks to compliment your vase color.
My opinion would be the microfiber.
Aside from the obvious biggies like Adobe's Photoshop and Illustrator, anything that lets you draw a line! But to get the full use of the pressure-sensitivity (one of the big advantages over a mouse), try art programs advanced enough to allow variation in line quality and color blending. I'm experimenting with ArtRage right now, which is fun to play with. There are plenty of other programs out there, some free and some which have free trials.