![]() Using a pen and tablet is really different from using a mouse and I keep remembering the advice of “give it time and don’t give up.” The process I’ve been going through has been interesting. It felt awkward reaching them when I was using the pen. I also didn’t care for the button placement at the top of the tablet. My finding was that the tracking of the pen seemed a little awkward and didn’t always track in a way that was intuitive for me. I started with the basic Intuos tablet in both small and medium sizes. I’m fortunate enough to have Wacom Headquarters right here in Portland, so I was able to go to the local Wacom Experience Center and try each of their pen tablets firsthand. The last piece of advice? Give it time and don’t give up. They said that the transition from mouse to pen tablet will take some time to learn because the hand to screen coordination is so different from using a mouse. They told me to buy a medium-sized tablet with a good quality pen - all of them specifically recommended Wacom. They were all using Photoshop, Lightroom or Capture One. I contacted colleagues and they all said that at some point in their editing journey they found themselves migrating to a pen tablet for parts of their editing work. ![]() In a recent training session, my client was using a pen tablet and I began to explore this as another option for me. Until recently I used a mouse, keyboard and trackpad to do all of my photo editing and color grading. ![]()
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