I assure you that I wrote these letters at the same speed using identical pressure, so it is very clear that the digital correction that streamline provides creates the most fluid calligraphy. And for a third comparison, I will use 50% streamline. Now I’ll adjust the strength to zero and write the same letter again. Here I have drawn a letter using maximum streamline strength. Now let’s see how this impacts a real composition. This was still, as I say, very early on in the iPad lettering era, so, on the one hand, I did not have a lot to compare myself to, but on the other I did not have places to go for help.Ĭompare the impact of streamline on stroke quality. The pen pressure that I got used to writing with when using a dip pen on paper, did not fully translate to the iPad, and at first, I really didn’t understand why. My Apple Pencil was sliding all over the glass. When my followers and subscribers tell me that they feel stuck and they don’t know what they're doing wrong, I just want you to know that I genuinely empathize. When the iPad Pro and Apple Pencil were released, I purchased them and began to experiment with writing in my pointed pen calligraphy style in procreate. This lesson will also help you if you are already accustomed to analog calligraphy, but, when it comes to using the Apple Pencil with Procreate, you are struggling with how to achieve the same stroke thicknesses and smooth letterforms that you can on paper. If you are struggling to emulate the thick and thin strokes you see other iPad calligraphers creating, this tutorial is for you. This lesson will help you if you’ve never learned ink-on-paper calligraphy.
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