| Product: |
Wacom Graphire Blueberry |
| Date: |
04/08/05 (1566 review reads) |
| Rating: |
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Advantages: Can use like a pen for create control and comfort when drawing or doing intricate photo editing
Disadvantages: The pen holder keeps falling off.
Another birthday had come around - and they do seem to come around very quickly these days - and my wife asked me what I thought I would like. "Dunno," I replied, "let's go and look in PC World."
When we entered the store, for quite some time the latest and fastest PC's with sleek TFT monitors acted like a magnet to me. After displaying quite a lot of patience, my wife dragged me to the display units that had the graphic tablets.
These little gadgets are great for anyone who likes greater control when editing photos, particularly the intricate alterations like getting rid of red-eye. For artists and illustrators I would think they are indispensable. My experience at art is very limited, but even worse if I attempt to draw anything using a mouse.
I had toyed with idea of getting one before when I'd seen them magazines, but now seeing them "in the flesh" the prospect looked even more inviting and I soon forgot about the technological wonders I had been looking at previously.
There were several out on display and the neatest one that would fit easily on my desk was the Wacom Graphire 3, priced just over £70. "That's a lot for my birthday present," says I, "do you want me to pay something towards it?"
"I'll get it," came the answer. Well it was expected really. It is a ritual with us.
Anything up to a hundred quid for a birthday present is fine. And besides, my wife would probably be using it from time to time on her computer. Great! I thought, no more fiddling around doing intricate adjustments to my photos with an unwieldy mouse!
In the box was the graphic tablet itself together with a wireless pen and cordless mouse - the latter of which was a little on the small side, but seeing I already had, on a previous birthday, a large tracker-ball mouse, I wasn't particularly worried.
Two CDs were also supplied, one with the driver for the graphics tablet and the other contained an art program called Procreate Painter Classic together with Acrobat Reader in case you didn't already have it loaded on the computer.
I plugged the graphic tablet into my USB port and was amazed when both the mouse and pen moved the pointer around the screen without loading the driver disk. But I do have Windows XP and it seemed to recognise the hardware. However, I put the driver disk in anyway and it auto started. After following on-screen instructions, another window popped up telling me the driver was loaded. The pen and the Wacom mouse worked fine, but the mouse only worked when placed on the tablet (it suppose to do that). It also felt very small in my hand but does have the conventional two buttons and a central wheel. Preferring my own mouse it was put back in the box and hasn't been used since.
The pen is good. It fits comfortably between the fingers like a fat fountain pen and it is easy to use because there are no cables or wires hanging from it to get in the way. It is also touch sensitive - drawing with a lighter touch, produces finer lines and press a little harder and you get thicker ones - just like an ordinary pen, pencil or crayon. Another use for the pen that I hadn't thought of, was that of signing your signature (in "real" writing) saving it as a jpeg/tiff file, that could then be inserted into an e-mail or other word processor document.
The buttons on the pen work similar to that of an ordinary mouse but are a little small and fiddly, but after using it for a while I soon got used to them. One problem I found though was that whilst you could access the menus at the top of a document, the pointer moved very slowly - but really it has to, because it is to be used for smaller intricate work. My roller-ball mouse is permanently connected, so I tend to access all menu functions with that.
Another thing that takes a bit of getting used to is the way the pointer moves around the work area - this could be a photo or blank canvass. You have to position the pointer where you want it on the item you are working on by moving it across the pad, then lift the pen completely off and move it above where you want it on the pad, before touching down - this gives you more room on the pad to manoeuvre when working. This is because the pad is so much smaller than the screen you are working on. A little bit of experimentation and practice and I was using it like a master.
At the top of the pad, clips a pen-holder which I got no end of problems with because I kept knocking the pen out of it, so I tended to lay it flat on the pad when I wasn't using it. But that's my own clumsiness I think.
At the other end of the pen itself is what looks like an eraser but it's plastic, and that's exactly what it does when you turn the pen upside down - it erases any mistakes you have made.
Procreate Painter Classic.
I don't know if this program still comes with this product, but I thought it was worth giving it a mention.
Installing the program was easy by just putting the CD in the drive, and following the instructions. At the end of the installation, you can register the software on line to receive hints/tips and upgrades etc. But seeing I am no artist and wouldn't be using it very often, I clicked on "Remind me later" - not wanting to close all my options.
On opening the program, I was faced with a grey, blank screen with the usual menu functions at the top. I then went into "File" then "New" and another smaller window popped up defaulted to 500 X 500 pixels and 720dpi, paper colour white, each of chich could be altered by clicking in the respective box. I just clicked OK and up popped a white canvass, which I could draw on with the pen.
Across the top was all the menu commands - File, Edit, Effects, Canvass, Select, Window and Help. I moved across to Window and selected - Brushes. This opened another small window. (All open windows could be moved wherever I wanted it for convenience). I clicked on the "pen" icon, and did a bit of scribbling, and save it as a jpeg which I have included below. You can also load an ordinary photograph into this program.
This got me wondering if the pen would work in my Photo program, so I loaded that and opened a blank page and sure enough, the pen would draw and erase in exactly the same way as it had in Procreate Painter Classic.
Finally, there is one more problem. There is no fat, hard copy user manual with the equipment, just a "quick start" booklet. But there is a very extensive manual if you select Help from the Procreate Painter Classic menu.
Since I got the graphic tablet last October (2004) I have used it about a dozen times, when I've needed to do intricate work with my photographs, such as removing red-eye, or using it to select small areas that needed lightening or darkening. Whether that little use justifies the cost of the £70 price tag it carries, is a matter of individual choice, but if you are artistic and interested in creating clip art or something similar, I would say the tablet is a great gadget to own.
Thanks for reading.
Summary: It's so much better than using the mouse for all types of art and photography.
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Last comments:
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- 10/08/05 Thanks to all the members who nominated me for a crown.. I was quite surprised when I saw it today... :-) Derek |
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- 05/08/05 Fantastic review and thanks for reading mine, i have set you up on my email alerts so i can rate all of your review. x |
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- 04/08/05 A few so called "experts" could do with reading this and seeing the difference between a personal review and reviewing the manual.
great personal feel and not in the slightest techiephonic.
Angus |
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