



In case you are not yet familiar with the interface of Corel Painter Essentials, the first video of his process gives quite some good impressions. Painter Essentials 6 Interface introĭavey Baker showed us in this post how to create a concept art landscape with Corel Painter Essentials and his Intuos. We have shared some of those with you in the past and now would be a great time for a quick reminder. There are several videos on the internet to help you get started with your (new) Intuos and Corel Painter Essentials once installed. This video quickly demonstrates this process: Once done you can download Corel Painter Essentials. If you want to redeem your free Corel Painter Essentials software, the automation process will ask you to create your Wacom ID (or log in if you already have one) here and register your device. Consider it a gift from us to Intuos users, to help bring more creativity to the world. Of course, you could purchase the Corel Painter Essentials software, but as an Intuos owner you don’t have to. If the installation interface does not prompt you directly to it, you can get your drivers here. Then, you will need a driver for your device so your tablet and your computer speak the same language. Obviously, you need to connect your tablet to your computer. Set up your device & install softwareįirst things first. All you need to know, is how to use it and how to get started with your Intuos. With this powerful top of the line software at your fingertips, you will be creating, if not miraculously conjuring, inspiring artwork. If you belong to the lucky ones who recently received a new Wacom Intuos, you will also be able to unleash your creativity with Corel Painter Essentials. Most Photoshop alternative's selection tools are tedious or do not support many languages and other advanced features.Once again it is recap time. If it is a text tool, a selection tool, complex languages (since in every country there are many other languages that exist and are unavoidable). Photoshop alternatives are thousand miles behind. If it no longer has the ease of use advantage, then only the occasional Humble bargain would be a sellingpoint for it, and the better question would be how it compared to GIMP.Ībsolutely wrong since Photoshop is a true professional tool. But, that was back when it was still JASC Paint Shop Pro 7, no idea if the better interface is still it's primary advantage, since, anything PSP can do, PS can do too anyway. Photoshop had more features, but PSP had all the features I needed in a more obvious layout, with less need to learn all kinds of shortcut keys to circumvent ten-layer menu trees. I used to find the user interface of Paint Shop Pro way more intuitive than that of Photoshop.
