🎨 Elevate your artistry with the One by Wacom – where imagination meets precision!
The One by Wacom Medium is a versatile drawing tablet designed for artists, remote workers, and students alike. With an active area of 8.5 x 5.3 inches, it features a battery-free stylus with 2,048 pressure levels for precise control. Compatible with major operating systems, this tablet is perfect for digital sketching, photo editing, and more, making it an essential tool for creative professionals.
B**D
Doesn’t make you better at drawing, but makes it feel nicer
Responsive, smooth, and doesn’t lag. Pen feels good in the hand and pressure sensitivity is spot on. Once you’ve spent a few minutes getting used to the feel of drawing on plastic instead of paper, it just works.Software setup wasn’t awful, which is rare and worth celebrating. Been using it for sketching and a bit of photo editing. Still can’t draw hands properly, but at least I can’t blame the tablet. A very decent bit of kit for anyone doing creative stuff on a screen.
J**E
Good Starter Pad
The pad is accurate, responsive, and easy to use. The pen feels smooth and natural, making it a great choice for beginners getting into digital art.
T**C
Nice and sensitive tablet
I've been using this for a few months now, so I thought it would be a good time to write a review. I had a Wacom tablet around 20 years ago and they have improved a lot over the years!The tablet is very sensitive so you don't have to press too hard like I used to with my old one. It's a good size but I had to get used to the tablet being smaller in proportion to my monitor - sometimes I'd want to click and drag something across the screen but it would go off the edge of the tablet.The pen is great. There are 2 buttons on it. When you click the bottom button on a link, it automatically opens in a new tab - something I use a lot. The top button is the "right click" function.I use it intermittently to give my mouse hand (left) a rest and some things are easier to do with a mouse.There are a couple of design flaws (unless I have it wrong!). I'm right-handed, so I have the tablet on the right. The only problem is the cable to connect to USB is on the left so it butts up against the keyboard and can get in the way. Secondly, the pen could do with some sort of protrusion to stop it rolling off the table. I've lost count of the number of times it's rolled onto the floor! These are minor details and apart from that I'm very happy with it and definitely recommend.
A**R
Best thing I ever bought for 'sculpting' on Blender
As a new-comer to Blender, I decided not to buy a graphics tablet until I was sure I was going to need one. I was happy to use just my laptop, the keyboard and my finger on the touchpad. I was able to 'sculpt' to a fairly high standard, just taking that extra amount of time and effort to do it. But then, as I got the hang of Blender, I thought about buying an 'all-singing, all-dancing' graphics tablet. I watched many videos covering the cheapest and simplest to the most expensive, and very nearly ordered one costing around 600 GBP. But then I worried about the possibility of faults, damage, etc and more importantly that these higher end graphics tablets require one to use both the graphics tablet with one hand, and a keyboard or supplemental 'mini-keyboard thingy' with the other, and obviously to sit at a desk and try to perform acrobatics reaching and using everything effectively, ultimately doing one's back and neck in.So, I thought, 'go for a cheap one first' and see how I get on.Well, after plumping for the 'Wacom One' I was confused when I received a 'One by Wacom' which in all of the videos is shown as being a different tablet to the 'Wacom One'. To add to the confusion the Wacom One is described as 'Red' and the 'One by Wacom' 'Black', but they are both Black on the 'face' and Red at the back and both come in the identical red box. The serial number of the Wacom One is different from the One by Wacom but it is given an extra 'N' in the description and online but not on the item itself. Anyway, it turns out I was sent the correct one, and boy, it made the job of sculpting a piece of cake!It was a simple task to go online and set the tablet up, with just a few clicks. I kept it so simple as to not even bother setting up the buttons on the pen other than 'select' ; forget about pressure, opting for delete, or 'back' etc, just use it as one would a plain pen. The sculpt. I had no issues whatsoever, looking at my laptop screen and NOT looking at my tablet and pen. I just looked at the cursor on my laptop and hand/eye coordination did the rest. It was so easy I actually began sculpting whilst laying on a couch, with the index finger of my left hand poised over the laptop shift button.By day two I and easily, and extremely cheaply, sculpted a fantastically detailed zombie rotting head/face and bodyWho needs a 500 GBP graphics tablet? Not me.
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