If you've always fancied getting hands-on with your design, but found that a Wacom Cintiq is just a little too far out of your price range, there's a new solution that promises to turn your iPad into a professional graphics tablet for your Mac.
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- Drawing Pad For Mac
- Intuos
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Astropad, created by ex-Apple engineers Matt Ronge and Giovanni Donelli, consists of a pair of apps – one for your iPad and one for your Mac – that enables you use your iPad with a pressure-sensitive stylus (or your finger if you prefer) and draw directly onto Photoshop – or any other app you might prefer – on your Mac.
The first Astropad app did a fantastic job of turning your iPad into a video graphics tablet for your Mac, making for an excellent companion for anybody using Adobe Photoshop and similar software.
With Astropad you can connect your iPad to your Mac either over your wi-fi network or via USB and use it as a second, touch-sensitive display. Now, we're sure you're aware that you can do that already, either using a services such as LogMeIn or TeamViewer, and there's already an app called Air Stylus that works in a similar way to Astropad; however Astropad promises top-quality performance and stunning image quality.
Using its own LIQUID technology developed by Ronge and Donelli, Astropad uses colour correction to ensure that what you see on your iPad is exactly the same as what you see on your Mac, and it aims to keep performance fluid and responsive, using GPU acceleration and special network optimisation to work at up to 60fps (twice as fast as AirPlay) without any loss of image quality, even working on your sofa over Wi-Fi. And to prevent your iPad running out of juice just as you're at the vital part of your design, Astropad's iPad app is written in ARM Assembly code to maximise battery life.
It's compatible with most pressure-sensitive iPad styluses; Astro HQ recommends either the Wacom Intuos Creative Stylus or the Adonit Jot Touch 4, but warns that more recent models suffer from precision issues that can result in wavy lines, especially on iPad Air 2.
At $49.99 it's not cheap, but you can download Astropad and try it out before you decide to splash the cash, and it still works out less expensive than even a Cintiq 13HD. And while the Cintiq still has the advantage of a bigger display, the much-rumoured iPad Pro is expected to launch within the next few months, with a 12 or even 13 inches of screen.
Words: Jim McCauley
Jim McCauley is a writer, editor and occasional podcaster, and is available for children's parties.
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Heaven for a hardcore graphic artist or photo editor is a Wacom Cintiq, one of those fancy input devices that builds in a display and includes a pen stylus for drawing, painting, or retouching photos. They’re amazing, but they’re pricey and not the most mobile.
What if graphic artists on a shoestring could simply use their iPads, at a fraction of the cost and with glorious portability? Astro-HQ wants to make that possible with software that transforms an iPad into a Mac graphics tablet. Founders Giovanni Donelli and Matt Ronge are even former Apple engineers.
Their product, Astropad, consists of companion apps for Mac and iPad. With the apps installed, the tablet links to the computer via Wi-Fi or a syncing cable to become a touchscreen editing surface for just about any Mac-based graphics program.
Draw on your iPad to draw on your Mac
Astropad unifies the iPad and Mac screens into one mirrored interface, with the tablet typically zoomed in to a portion of a work area that is shown in its entirety on the Mac. You can zoom and pan on the tablet to move around a graphics project in progress, glancing over to the Mac screen for reference. A set of buttons on the side of the iPad’s screen provides access to Mac commands and shortcuts, so you don’t have to switch to your computer as often.
Customized Photoshop controls work well out of the gate, including a floating pallette with Adobe-specific tools on the right side of the iPad screen. But the developers say the commands also work fine with other Mac graphics programs, and you can customize them as needed.
Astropad has been designed to work with popular stylus models such as Adonit’s $30 Jot Pro, Wacom’s Bamboo line, and FiftyThree’s $50 Pencil. Some styluses incorporate pressure sensitivity, which is important since iPads do not natively build in this capability the way pro graphics displays do. Astropad even lets you program the buttons on such styluses for specific functions.
The developers are crossing their fingers at rumors of an imminent Apple-branded stylus, as well, since they think that would help put their apps on the map. (So would a much-rumored 12-inch iPad Pro, they believe.)
Astropad is not an entirely new idea. Rival apps such as Air Stylus and Limner provide similar capabilities. But Astro-HQ claims superiority over competing apps in a few key ways. First, images on the iPad have been “color-corrected to match what is on the Mac,” says Ronge, and the software aims for “really high image quality.”
“We have focused on the fidelity of the pixels,” Ronge explains. “With other apps, you see JPEG artifacts, fuzzy things around text, and hard edges. Someone with trained eyes, like an artist, will pick up that stuff.”
The developers say they also focused on Astropad’s performance, because other attempts to make an iPad a satellite to a Mac have been marred by lag and stuttering. Astropad is supposed to greatly enhance graphics fluidity and responsiveness via a software engine the developers call “Liquid.”
Astro-HQ also claims greater stylus compatibility than competitors. 5miles app for mac. Limner, for instance, only works with a trio of styluses, but Astropad should work with just about any iPad-compatible stylus now on the market. Astro-HQ also claims nearly universal Mac-app compatibility, meaning any Mac graphics program should work with Astropad, while Air Stylus works with some apps but not others.
Test drive
At $50, Astropad isn’t insanely expensive, although it is priced like a professional-grade app. So we handed it to David Steinlicht, a professional cartoonist with two published comic-strip volumes to his name. Steinlicht tried Astropad with Photoshop CS5 and Studio Neat’s Cosmonaut stylus on a MacBook Air and year-old iPad mini 2.
Drawing Pad For Computer
The small iPad felt a bit claustrophobic, he said, adding, “I wonder if it would have been a little more fun using a full-sized iPad.” But he found Astropad “very easy to get going.”
Drawing Pad For Mac App
Steinlicht has never used a Cintiq-style pen display, only a traditional Wacom graphics tablet with no screen, so “seeing the drawing appear on the iPad, right underneath the stylus, is sweet! That is the way it should be.”
Get them all app older versions for mac. Steinlicht encountered minor performance issues, but said these weren’t deal breakers. “I feel the traditional Wacom input is a little more instantaneous,” he said. “But the lag is not that noticeable while using Astropad.”
Drawing Pad For Mac Illustrator
Using Astropad effectively required a bit of practice, too. “I had a little bit of a time understanding what it was doing, what was an active area (on the iPad) and not,” Steinlicht said. “I think I was slightly confused because I have not really used a Wacom tablet for a while. This program really spells out what is an active area. On the Wacom, it just works or doesn’t.”
Drawing Pad For Mac
He isn’t sure he’d keep using Astropad, but it’s “very nice stuff. I enjoyed playing with it. It gave me a peek into what having a Cintiq would be like.” Steinlicht whipped up four images using Astropad. Three were drawn from scratch, and the fourth, an image of the late New York Times writer David Carr, is a tracing of a photo found on the Internet.
Intuos
One final Astropad note: If the dog that is part of the product’s logo seems familiar, that is because it’s a variation on Apple’s famed Dogcow. The developers said they have been inspired by that and other Apple classics, such as the pioneering MacPaint app bundled with the first Macs.
Apple Drawing Pad
And, as Steinlicht observes, it might not be coincidental that the pet dog in the beloved cartoon The Jetsons is called…Astro.