Aside from the obvious biggies like Adobe's Photoshop and Illustrator, anything that lets you draw a line! But to get the full use of the pressure-sensitivity (one of the big advantages over a mouse), try art programs advanced enough to allow variation in line quality and color blending. I'm experimenting with ArtRage right now, which is fun to play with. There are plenty of other programs out there, some free and some which have free trials.
Gimp, Paint.net, Corelpaint and photoshop are brilliant :)
Oh, And the paint editor on scratch is great, too
A lot of Wacom drawing tablets come with pretty good art programs that take advantage of everything the tablet can do, but Sketchbook Express (which came with my Wacom Pen & Touch Medium) is pretty good.
A lot of Wacom drawing tablets come with pretty good art programs that take advantage of everything the tablet can do, but Sketchbook Express (which came with my Wacom Pen & Touch Medium) is pretty good.
You should contact Wacom support, they answered me quickly, but most likely yes. My experience is with a Bamboo pen on an older tablet, it works perfect. Wacom has a good backwards compatibility policy.
It's excellent. Easy to use and brilliant. Check out Simon's Cat. Simon does the animation using a Bamboo.
no it is not! it is a very good artist program.
Wacom brand is considered the best brand of tablet. The Cintiq is the best one by far, but is very pricey, ranging from $999 to $1999. With the Cintiq, your drawing shows up on the tablet itself as well as on your computer, and is considered to be a professional tablet. For more of an entry level tablet, the Bamboo, also from Wacom, is a good choice. They are far less expensive, but your drawing won't show up on the tablet itself. Though it is not as costly, pricing from $49 to $199, it's smaller than the Cintiq. While the large Cintiq ($1,999) is 22inX1.9inX16.6in, the Bamboo (only comes in one size I'm pretty sure) is 9.8inX0.2inX9.6in. The third and final type of (new) tablet is the Intuos4. This is also considered for professionals, but its pricing is between the Cintiq and the Bamboo, spanning from $229 to $469. It does not display your drawing on the tablet itself, which is what really separates the Bamboo and the Intuos4 from the mighty Cintiq. Whatever level of tablet you're looking for, I really hope this helped. :) Oh, and here's the link to Wacom's online store. You can purchase one from here, but you could probably find one way cheaper on Ebay or Amazon. https://direct.wacom.com/stores/5/index.cfm <------ Wacom Store
You can find apparel manufacturing software on google. There are many good websites of software that is available. It involves clothing and finding the right software to help you make profit off of it.
A graphics tablet such as the ones manufactured by Wacom is a good idea, alongside Adobe Flash, a 30 day free trial of which can be downloaded at Adobe's website (see the link below in the Relevant Links section).
A good drawing stylus and probably the best for the iPad is the Wacom Bamboo Stylus.
Personally I believe that Paint is good for starting drawings while gimp is good for colouring them in and editing photos.
The Fast-Touch tablet is one of the best in its class, which makes it a good tablet to buy.
CorelDRAW X6