What really surprised me is that the manufacturers don't tune the pressure response to be linear. This video encouraged me to experiment more with the pressure curve. Thanks!
Great video! I'd love to see a video from you about the 4k scaling on MacOS. I don't know if you addressed that in a previous video, but it would be great to see your tests on Mac retina and non-retina resolutions, 4k scaling issues with performance and fuzziness, etc.
Good stuff and depth. I keep my global curve as linear, then tweak the pressure curves per brush preset. For example having a different curve for a "pencil" vs a "charcoal" vs an "oil brush" will want a gradual ramp up on some, but on a paint brush to go to high pressure on a steep curve easily. I also think the more pressure levels 4k, 8k, 16k are more than just hype. As pens support longer pressure ranges, you need some headroom for when you need to chop off the top end to go to full pressure without putting actually 800g of pressure. If I chop off the last 1/4 of the curve then I've effectively cut off part of that 8k range of pressure levels.
Great video, will be really great if you could do a video of how a spring nib of wacom affects the pressure curve by adding extra resistance, new pens wont have this nib anymore, and i kind of miss it.
What really surprised me is that the manufacturers don't tune the pressure response to be linear. This video encouraged me to experiment more with the pressure curve. Thanks!
Great, informative video man!
Great video! I'd love to see a video from you about the 4k scaling on MacOS. I don't know if you addressed that in a previous video, but it would be great to see your tests on Mac retina and non-retina resolutions, 4k scaling issues with performance and fuzziness, etc.
Good stuff and depth. I keep my global curve as linear, then tweak the pressure curves per brush preset. For example having a different curve for a "pencil" vs a "charcoal" vs an "oil brush" will want a gradual ramp up on some, but on a paint brush to go to high pressure on a steep curve easily. I also think the more pressure levels 4k, 8k, 16k are more than just hype. As pens support longer pressure ranges, you need some headroom for when you need to chop off the top end to go to full pressure without putting actually 800g of pressure. If I chop off the last 1/4 of the curve then I've effectively cut off part of that 8k range of pressure levels.
Great video, will be really great if you could do a video of how a spring nib of wacom affects the pressure curve by adding extra resistance, new pens wont have this nib anymore, and i kind of miss it.