i am looking for my first iPad, I want to use it for drawing and learning how to animate, would you recommend a 11” or 13”? Thanks.
Yes
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>>79923810Wow it’s interesting I come across this thread because I was in the same dilemma last year trying to decide between the two. I bit the bullet and bought the bigger one, 13”, and have not regretted it. It’s so much nicer to have the bigger screen real estate to work with imo. I use it everyday!
the bigger the better innit
>>79925931That's cool
>>79923810I got a 13 inch one like a year ago for drawing, a part of me wishes I'd gotten the 11 inch one just because I value portability a LOT and 13 inches is dangerously close to laptop territoryalso I find that, in my personal drawing style, i wind up mostly just zooming in and working in a small area in the center anyways so the extra space is kind of wasted on me. But I also pinch to zoom and move a LOT, and I know some people just prefer to have the canvas in front of them and work with that.So i would say the deciding factor is whether you prefer to work zoomed out or zoomed in, and whether portability actually matters that much for you.
>>79923810I'm not sure exactly what size the 7th gen is, but I often think about getting a bigger one, I'd call that a bare minimum. Can't really justify the purchase when it still works fine, though.
>>79930152to add to this, the weird thing I found was that i used to use a 16 inch wacom cintiq and that was a decent enough size but i could have gone bigger.I think the workflow process point is really important here, because when I was using the cintiq i wasn't zooming in and rotating and panning very much because on desktop drawing software it's a bit less seamless. Some drawing tablets dont even have touch controls, and most that do are pretty bad. But on ios/android, you can navigate effortlessly and intuitively. And personally, I think that compensates a lot for screen size.
>>79930238>The iPad 7th Generation (2019) is a 10.2-inch tablet featuring an A10 Fusion chip, Touch ID, and Lightning port, supporting the first-gen Apple Pencil and Smart Keyboard. Released in late 2019, it was Apple's first iPad with a larger 10.2-inch screen, offering features like a headphone jack and decent battery life, but with older design elements like thick bezels, and it's now discontinued but can still run current iPadOS versions, making it suitable for basic tasks despite its age.
>>79930238Samsung makes a really large tablet. It's also really expensive though.