Here’s a fantastically convoluted turn of events. As many of you are aware, Apple is bringing its iPad to market this coming saturday. We even have our man, Martyn Day, camped outside the San Francisco Apple Store, clutching his pre-order invoice in his sweaty little palms as we speak (I think. Tool selection Pick a tool using one of the following methods: Tap a tool the toolbar to select it. Sketchbook Pro supports up to six layers with. With its many advanced features, it proves to be one of the best painting apps in the App Store. There are also an assortment of editing tools. Sketchbook Pro from Autodesk is just such an app. He might be in the pub around the corner). Tools in Sketchbook Pro for desktop There are fill, guide, symmetry, and text tools, as well as cropping, transform, distort, perspective, drawing, and stroke tools. The potential for the device is huge, it looks like a device that could change things and its been a constant source of discussion in meetings with vendors since it’s public launch a few months ago. Just a moment ago, a british industrial design on twitter, Nick Harvey, retweeted a post by none other than Stephen Fry – yes, THAT Stephen Fry. This showed a screenshot of what looks to be the splash screen for an iPad variant of SketchBook Pro – quite a turn of events.Īutodesk of course, have been doing the iPhone thing like rockstars with SketchBook Mobile for some time and have shifted serious units – over a million. If you want the numbers as of November last year, that breaks down to 141,000 paid for licenses and over 900,000 downloads of the free version. Without leaving your work in Sketchbook, if you want to check on something in a secondary app, swipe in from the right of your screen for an overlay of that app.ĭepending on the model of your device, you will have Split View and/or Slide Over functionality.So, SketchBook Pro for iPad, looks like a perfectly timed release.Īssuming that Apple take their usual 30-40% cut, that’s some serious change from a $1.99 app. Split View is the Apple version of split-screen multitasking.Slide Over is a peek-in-peek-out type function and is only available for the iPad mini 4 and iPad Pro.Sketchbook supports split-screen multi-tasking, using Split View and/or Slide Over. Set a corner tool to Frame Canvas (see Customizing the corner tools) and tap it to instantly change what you see and display the full canvas. To expand or shrink an image to fit the current display, in the Lagoon tap and flick toward or use the hotkeys Cmd+0 (zero) on Mac or Ctrl+0 (zero) on Windows.Ĭhanging your view in Sketchbook for mobile devices Move your finger along the touch strip in an upward motion to zoom in or a downward motion to zoom out.įor the actual pixel size of an image, in the Lagoon tap and flick toward or press the hotkeys Option+ Cmd+0 (zero) on Mac or Alt+ Ctrl+0 (zero) on Windows. Position your cursor over the area you want to zoom in or out of. Drag with two fingers in any direction to move the canvasįrom the menu bar, the View menu includes multiple options for changing your view, including zooming, rotating, and fitting the canvas to the view.Ĭintiqs and some tablets have a touch strip for zooming.Twist with two fingers to rotate the content on all layers.With two fingers, drag and expand on the canvas to zoom in, or pinch to zoom out. In the outer ring of the puck, tap-drag to pan the canvasįor touchscreen-equipped devices, gestures can be used for navigation.
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