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There are a number of iPad sketching applications on the App Store, with Penultimate clocking as one of the top 15 most purchased iPad apps ever.

Now there's a new competitor that looks to take the iPad sketching world by storm. Paper is the first app by upstart development firm FiftyThree. A number of the employees spent time at Microsoft, developing Courier -- a dual-screen digital notebook that was axed by Microsoft.

The Verge's Ellis Hamburger spoke to the team about the app.
When you first open the app, you first see a panoramic view of all of your notebooks floating in mid-air. Each notebook looks like a premium Moleskine journal, fit with a stunning cover and pages that look soft to the touch. When you tap a notebook, you're launched into a CoverFlow-esque page browser where you can thumb through sketches in your notebook. Tap a new page and your entire screen turns an almost white shade of vanilla, unadorned by faux binder rings or ripped edges you see in other apps.

Swipe up from the bottom of the screen to reveal your artist's palette, and swipe down again to hide it. Paper comes with an eraser and just one tool to draw with, a fountain pen that's unlike any fountain pen I've used. The faster you move your finger, the thicker the line gets. For $1.99 each, you can purchase four other tools, denoted not by their conventional names but instead by utility: there's Write (ballpoint), Sketch (pencil), Outline (marker), and Color (watercolor paintbrush). Each of the five tools has its own unpredictable personality worth mastering, which makes these instruments so much more interesting than conventional digital pens and pencils you can find in other apps. The FiftyThree team chose these five tools because they encompass the five most common scenarios they encounter when mapping out ideas and art on a daily basis.
Check out The Verge's lengthly article for much more about the app and the team behind it.

For those who want to jump in and try it out, Paper for iPad is a free download on the App Store. [Direct Link]

Article Link: 'Paper' Aims to Be The Ultimate iPad Sketchbook
 

Dr McKay

macrumors 68040
Aug 11, 2010
3,430
57
Kirkland
Now if only the iPad screen refresh rate was high enough so you didn't have to draw achingly slow. And it registered levels of pressure with stylus support. Or the touchscreen delay for presses was faster.
 

Icaras

macrumors 603
Mar 18, 2008
6,344
3,393
Cool, I'd also like to know what stylus he is using in the video.
 

thai4life

macrumors newbie
Feb 11, 2012
27
0
Wirelessly posted

Wow. Brace yourselves, folks. Stories like this are all we're gonna get for awhile. It's gonna be a lonnnnng wait till summer or dare I say even later for a new iPhone announcement.
 

jettredmont

macrumors 68030
Jul 25, 2002
2,731
328
Now if only the iPad screen refresh rate was high enough so you didn't have to draw achingly slow. And it registered levels of pressure with stylus support. Or the touchscreen delay for presses was faster.

Really? I would posit that you either (1) have a severely broken iPad, or (2) are confusing your Samsung Note with an iPad. I'd put money on the latter, in fact.

(Obviously, this is in reply only to the screen refresh rate and touchscreen delay ... levels of pressure in a stylus outside of the "how much does the nub squish" approximation is not something iPad has ever had)
 
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cvaldes

macrumors 68040
Dec 14, 2006
3,237
0
somewhere else
This app has potential, but it's freemium right now. It comes with one pen nib and a tiny color palette. In-app purchases will add up quickly.

The free app download is basically a demo version.

That said, it's probably worth downloading at least once, that way Apple has a record of your free purchase. If they ever change their business model and make it a paid app with more functionality, then it'll be in your purchase history.
 

joejoejoe

macrumors 65816
Sep 13, 2006
1,428
110
Just tried this app and it really, really is wonderful. Registers your touch like a charm and makes you look like a professional calligrapher. I'm sure with a stylus it's even better. I understand charging for different pens, my only qualm at this point it the limited color palette but I imagine it will expand int he future.

Again, this is a really, really well done app and I suggest anyone with any interest in drawing/handwriting to download it.
 

nutmac

macrumors 603
Mar 30, 2004
6,060
7,332
Just tried it on the new iPad. It is marred by three major flaws.

1. Two finger gesture (e.g., rewind, go back to home) doesn't work well, requiring far more effort to activate and use the features.

2. Very laggy drawing tool (at least included fountain pen), about 0.1 to 0.2 second by my estimate.

3. In-app purchase prices of 4 additional drawing tools (pencil, marker, pen, and watercolor) are quite expensive at $1.99 a pop (or pay 3 cents more for all 4 at $7.99). I suppose the developers need to make money somehow but that is rather exorbitant for a set of laggy drawing tools.
 

HiRez

macrumors 603
Jan 6, 2004
6,250
2,576
Western US
This app has potential, but it's freemium right now. It comes with one pen nib and a tiny color palette. In-app purchases will add up quickly.

I guess for casual users that might be a problem. But come on, what's it going to cost you to load up everything, like $15? You're basically getting a cheaper but much higher resolution Wacom Cintique and Corel Painter (the 12" Cintiq model is 1280x800 and $1,000, Painter is like $400). Yes, I know this is more limited in what it can do, but it can replace a lot of what people typically do with those tools.

Peoples' sense of value is all out of whack IMO, that's an amazing deal for something that looks like it can be a real, serious sketching/drawing tool. FIFTEEN DOLLARS!! That really does not seem like a great hardship for someone who can already afford a $500-$800 iPad and $10-$30 stylus. A few years ago, you couldn't even get a piece of shareware utility software that makes animated .gifs for $15, now you get a mini art studio, sheesh.
 

ck2875

macrumors 65816
Mar 25, 2009
1,029
2,923
Brighton
I ended up springing for all of the packs for this. I quite like it and hope to see it evolve. I particularly liked that the IAP's had the preview were you could test out what the brush did.
 

charlieegan3

macrumors 68020
Feb 16, 2012
2,394
17
U.K
Wirelessly posted

Wow. Brace yourselves, folks. Stories like this are all we're gonna get for awhile. It's gonna be a lonnnnng wait till summer or dare I say even later for a new iPhone announcement.

what do you want? a new iPhone every day?
 

cvaldes

macrumors 68040
Dec 14, 2006
3,237
0
somewhere else
Peoples' sense of value is all out of whack IMO, that's an amazing deal for something that looks like it can be a real, serious sketching/drawing tool. FIFTEEN DOLLARS!! That really does not seem like a great hardship for someone who can already afford a $500-$800 iPad and $10-$30 stylus. A few years ago, you couldn't even get a piece of shareware utility software that makes animated .gifs for $15, now you get a mini art studio, sheesh.
I note that Autodesk SketchBook Pro for iPad typically retails at $4.99 and occasionally drops down to $0.99 or $1.99. No additional in-app purchases are necessary and the app performs well.

Comparable apps such as procreate and Artist's Touch for iPad are also typically priced at $4.99. Inspire Pro is typically $7.99 although it often drops down to $0.99 or $1.99.

Adobe Ideas is typically $9.99 although it occasionally drops down to $5.99 (it debuted as a free app).

This app category has a lot of competition these days. 'Paper' would really need to be vastly superior to command $15 of in-app purchases.
 
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chainprayer

macrumors 6502a
Feb 10, 2008
638
2
Wirelessly posted

http://i.tuaw.com/2012/03/05/ten-one-design-outs-ipad-3-pressure-sensitive-bluetooth-stylus/

Consider your myth busted.
 

pubwvj

macrumors 68000
Oct 1, 2004
1,901
208
Mountains of Vermont
They are missing a tool: typewriter/keyboard. I want to be able to type, create searchable text, outlines, formulas, etc. This is a must have for a notebook - drawing, typing, math. If they do that then I buy.
 

cvaldes

macrumors 68040
Dec 14, 2006
3,237
0
somewhere else
This app is more intended to be a sketching tool, not a full-blown word processor/page layout app. You could drop the image generated from this app into another document.

Autodesk's SketchBook Pro for iPad does have a text tool, but it won't create the other things (searchable text, outlines, formulas, etc.).
 

Gooberton

macrumors 65816
Jun 20, 2010
1,280
672
Wirelessly posted

joejoejoe said:
Just tried this app and it really, really is wonderful. Registers your touch like a charm and makes you look like a professional calligrapher. I'm sure with a stylus it's even better. I understand charging for different pens, my only qualm at this point it the limited color palette but I imagine it will expand int he future.

Again, this is a really, really well done app and I suggest anyone with any interest in drawing/handwriting to download it.

Yea, there's no red.. Wtf? No red??
 

pauliaK

macrumors regular
Jan 16, 2012
142
56
Banff, AB
This app has potential, but it's freemium right now. It comes with one pen nib and a tiny color palette. In-app purchases will add up quickly.

The free app download is basically a demo version.

That said, it's probably worth downloading at least once, that way Apple has a record of your free purchase. If they ever change their business model and make it a paid app with more functionality, then it'll be in your purchase history.
If this would ever happen they would probably put paid version of this app as a separate app from the current one, leaving this one as a fee demo or buy what you actually need, well the way it is now.

Talking about the app, it's nice, very nice actually, but having all the tools and features is a bit too expensive I would say... It's 8$ if I'm right.
 

mdriftmeyer

macrumors 68040
Feb 2, 2004
3,810
1,985
Pacific Northwest
Not a very functional application if you are being recommended to spend $29.95+ for Wacom's Bamboo pen and 4 out of 5 input options cost an additional $1.99 each.

Just bundle them all and partner with Wacom to strike a better deal.

Otherwise, for a fully functioning app you're looking at $40+ for this application.

Pass.
 
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