![]() The mixer is still not perfect, but it’s pretty good. This is a feature I have always wanted in a painting program and I am delighted that there is a company out there working on it. The first thing that caught my eye was the colour palette – for mixing in the way you would mix traditional oil or acrylics. The app itself has a pretty weird interface on opening. There are also desktop versions of Paintstorm Studio for Windows, OSX and Linux (cheap as chips at £15) if you don’t want to splash out for Photoshop. Having Photoshop support is potentially worth paying the money for if you like to jump between the tablet for your main drawing and then the desktop for further edits. For this review I have just used the Lite version, however from what I have researched online the main things you are paying for in the full version are Photoshop. There is a free Lite version and a fully featured version at £12.99, which is quite pricy in the world of painting apps. Someone sent a message to the iPad Pro Facebook account last week suggesting I check out and review Paintstorm Studio so I decided to give it a go. ProCreate pretty much does everything I want and nothing else I have used on the iPad Pro has come close to it, so there wasn’t much point – until now. It has been a while since I have checked out any new painting apps. Would like: More refined Apple Pencil control ![]()
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