As may have been indicated by some of the posts I’ve made already, I am something of a fan of drawing. Concept art, designs, and characters are among my favorite subject material. The nature of the things uploaded in my earlier posts may also have indicated that digital sketching is among the methods I employ.
For my digital art I employ a Kamvas pro 13 graphics tablet from the Huion company. It comes in a big black box, and while undeniably pricey, is far more economical than similar products by Wacom, the giant in digital art hardware.
Once removed from the aforementioned big, black box, the tablet reveals itself to be a screen slightly narrower and longer than a piece of printer paper. It comes with a stylus for drawing with. One of the great selling points of this model of tablet is that the pen requires no battery or charge; you can use it forever as long as the tablet is plugged in. Besides its screen, the tablet also has a total of five buttons and a slider (plus two more buttons on the stylus) which can be mapped to any key combination on your keyboard. For example, one of the buttons on my tablet functions as Control-z, handy for rapidly undoing mistakes, and my stylus can toggle between pen and eraser mode quite easily. The tablet’s screen is indeed a screen, and can be configured just like a second monitor. The tablet itself requires connection to a USB port to register as an input device, a HDMI port to render, and a power supply. All of that fits into the single cable visible on the right of the tablet in the photo,
Once you plug in the tablet, however, you’re still not quite done. See, the tablet registers on your computer as a USB input device and displays exactly like it should, but your computer doesn’t really know how to talk to the tablet. If you try doing anything like using that pressure sensitivity it just wont work. For this, you need to download the company’s driver. A driver is just a special piece of software that you use to talk to hardware. Your computer comes with a lot of drivers built into its operating system, which is why you don’t need to specially configure your mouse or keyboard when you set them up. Your computer knows how to handle a HDMI display (hence why the tablet’s display works just fine), but your computer probably has no clue how to handle the pressure input by itself, since it assumes that your stylus is just like a mouse pointer. This is where the Huion tablet graphics diver comes in. This driver is made by the company, and lets your computer talk to the tablet properly. This app window lets you set up your hotkeys, configure the display, select how the contact on the tablet screen maps to the display, and to calibrate the pen input (configuring how the tablet’s display is treated as a monitor is done through your computer’s normal settings window). Once this is set up, you can start drawing.
Now, your tablet and driver may be fancy, but they’re not an art setup by themselves, because they can’t actually, well, do art. All of this so far has been setting things up so you can input brush strokes into your computer. To actually get drawing, you need a special art program. For this there are many great options such as Photoshop, but also a huge number of free and open-source online projects by various groups. GIMP is one popular example. For my art, I use a program called Krita, which besides a simple and easily to use interface has some spectacular brush templates and a great color selection dialogue. However, most tablets will work with most art software, albeit with varying amounts of setup required. Krita is great because it detects your tablet automatically.
And that’s about it! Once you’ve set it all up, then the world of art is your oyster. Cheers, and happy drawing!