- #DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO INSTALL#
- #DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO PRO#
- #DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO SOFTWARE#
- #DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO PC#
However, I took a break from artwork and when I came back to the app it told me to delete and reinstall. This was my favorite program I'd used and I loved working with this program and improving my art. In comic sans though.įirst of all, I bought this app I think over two years ago and it was a one time 60 dollar purchase. If you have any idea how this can be resolved, I have three more stars with your name on it.
I’m running High Sierra on a mid-2012 i5 MacBook Pro, 4gb of RAM and an SSD, and I’m using a Cintiq for drawing.
#DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO SOFTWARE#
I’m a bit of a luddite, but my other design suite and even video editing software run perfectly fine and I’d imagine they’d be more taxing on memory.
#DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO INSTALL#
I’ve even done a clean install of High Sierra and the problem persists. I’ve followed all the suggestions in the fora - resetting to factory default, turning off enable rotate, brush stamp, etc, restoring, reinstalling and trying old versions of the Cintiq software - no dice. The brushes lag, particularly the larger ones. This version (8.6.1) seems to have dropped the ball on responsiveness and the knock-on is a pretty frustrasting experience throughout. I’m a storyboard artist and the previous releases have all been perfect for what I do - fast and responsive. I’ve used them in studio and home environments and I’ve yet to find another program that matches Sketchbook’s usability, elegance and friendly feel.
#DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO PC#
The technique should work just as well with any drawing program that supports layers, a web conference that supports screen-sharing, and a tablet or tablet PC that lets you draw or erase easily.I’ve been a big fan of the previous releases since the beginning.
Then it was time to share my screen, turn on the webcam, and give my presentation! I hid all the tools I didn’t need, and kept the layers window open on the side so that I could easily switch to another layer.
That way, I could always unhide it (thus blanking out everything else I’d drawn), add a new transparent layer on top, and sketch away. Just in case I needed to go into more detail, I added another layer on top, filled it with white, and hid the layer. This meant that I could quickly remove accents or new sketches without disturbing my pre-drawn sketches. I drew on the the white layer that I gradually erased to reveal the underlying sketches. Because my Lenovo X61 tablet pen has a pen tip and an eraser tip, I could easily flip between revealing pre-drawn sketches and adding new sketches. I also wanted to be able to draw new sketches or highlight items, so I selected a red ballpoint pen as my primary brush. I selected a large eraser to make it even easier. That way, I could use an eraser to reveal the sketches below. I set the opacity of this layer to 90% so that I could see the traces of the images on the layer underneath. I created a layer on top of my "slide", and I flood-filled this layer with white. I used an idea from children’s activity books: instead of drawing, you can use the eraser to make content appear, like the way you would scratch off black paint to reveal colours. I pre-drew my one-slide talking points on a single layer so that I wouldn’t have to count on thinking, talking, and drawing all at the same time. It was much more fun and much more flexible than annotating in Microsoft Powerpoint. =) I’ll post a link to the recording when it’s up. I think I’ll do this for as many presentations as I can get away with.
#DRAWING AUTODESK SKETCHBOOK PRO PRO#
I gave a presentation using Autodesk Sketchbook Pro and desktop-sharing in Lotus Live, and it worked out really well.