X

Wacom Bamboo Paper app and Stylus tested with your pictures

We grabbed an iPad, Wacom Bamboo Paper app and the Wacom Bamboo Stylus and got our art on, drawing your requests.

Richard Trenholm
Richard Trenholm was CNET's film and TV editor, covering the big screen, small screen and streaming. A member of the Film Critic's Circle, he's covered technology and culture from London's tech scene to Europe's refugee camps to the Sundance film festival.
Richard Trenholm
main.jpg
1 of 18

Can you tell what it is yet? Wacom Bamboo Paper is a new drawing app for the iPad, and we decided to channel Rolf Harris to test it with requests from our Facebook fans. We grabbed an iPad and the Wacom Bamboo Stylus, a pen that draws on the iPad's screen, and got art like Tony Hart.

The Bamboo Stylus feels like a normal pen, but with a squidgy end. It mimics the effect of a finger, so it feels like drawing with a big thick marker pen. We weren't expecting much precision. It's no draughtsman's tool, but the stylus surprised us with how precise it could be -- and how much fun. We found that once we relaxed into the loose style required, and got our eye in, drawing with the Bamboo stylus could be an absolute blast.

The only problem with the stylus is that if the rest of your hand touches the iPad, it can leave unwanted lines. But again, taking a more relaxed approach made us smile at the inadvertent marks -- the digital equivalent of smudging your paper. And these marks can be eradicated with a quick swish of finger or stylus -- marvelous.

The iPad screen isn't pressure-sensitive, so the Bamboo stylus isn't as sensitive as the stylii that come with Wacom's pressure-sensing tablets, which know how hard you're pressing and vary line thickness accordingly. But the app does mark thinner lines when you draw faster, giving a small but pleasing variation to line weight.

To give the app and pen a thorough test, we threw this review open to our Facebook fans and invited requests for drawings. Crave's scribbler-in-residence donned his beret and stayed up all night cranking out the best of your requests, and the results are above. But is it art?

The app takes the form of a virtual notebook, in which each new picture appears as an extra page. You can email or print individual pictures, or share the entire book as a PDF.

One neat touch is that you can choose from plain, lined or squared paper, for that old-school exercise book feel or to keep your scribbles straight. Unfortunately though, the app appears in portrait mode. It's a blank page, so you can turn the iPad any which way and scribble whichever way you like, but the icons remain stubbornly sideways. That takes away from the slick feel Wacom is aiming for.

The icons let you choose from a pen or eraser, undo and redo strokes, or clear the whole page. You can use your fingers to pinch to zoom in and out, or use two fingers to pan around the picture.

The main problem with the app is the lack of drawing options. There are only three thicknesses to choose from, and the only colours are green, black, burgundy and three shades of blue. No bright red, yellow, no flesh tones, and if you want white, you have to use the eraser. Sadly there's only one size of eraser: chunky. For drawing options, it's not a patch on the selection of colours and pen sizes in rival app Adobe Ideas, but that costs £2.50 and Bamboo Paper is free. Fingers crossed for more colours in future updates.

We love the old-school notebook feel of the Wacom Bamboo Paper app, and drawing with the Bamboo Stylus is great fun. Click through the pictures to see our efforts, and click 'like' on our Facebook page to join in the fun. Just don't expect this every week.

img-0025.jpg
2 of 18
This is CNET UK editor Jason's contribution. Don't worry Jason, even Picasso had to start somewhere.
img-0004.jpg
3 of 18
A cheeky request for the Samsung Galaxy Tab from Ian Lorenc.
img-0024.jpg
4 of 18
Muse singer Matt Bellamy, for Holly Brockwell.
img-0005.jpg
5 of 18
The CNET logo, for Dan Lesser.
img-0019.jpg
6 of 18
For best results, we drew colours in blocks.
img-0020.jpg
7 of 18
Here we see the image evolving. Can you guess what it is yet?
img-0021.jpg
8 of 18
Yes, it's a grizzly bear riding a shark through an explosion. You're welcome, Andrew Peter Lanxon Fisher Hoyle.
img-0026.jpg
9 of 18
Hector the amorous robot gets to grips with Farrah Fawcett in Saturn 3, a favourite of Ian Rendall.
img-0011.jpg
10 of 18
A dinosaur for Kate Matlock. Clever girl...
img-0014.jpg
11 of 18
And a spaceship attacking that dinosaur, for Ro Atkinson. Pew pew!
img-0030.jpg
12 of 18
What's that? Why, it's a cat on a banana boat, of course. Thanks, Jamie Fairley.
img-0018.jpg
13 of 18
MegaTimer, despotic ruler of the CNET UK podcast, decides to crush puny humanity beneath its mighty fists. If it had fists. The end of all life on Earth was requested by Matt Greenfield.
img-0028.jpg
14 of 18
A chicken in a tuxedo, for Rich Kerr. Finger-lickin' good.
img-0022.jpg
15 of 18
Brian Blessed. We couldn't draw him covered in marmalade, as Matt Greenfield originally requested, because the app doesn't have orange.
img-0009.jpg
16 of 18
An anthropomorphic badger, wearing a 'Kiss the Cook' apron, acting as a short-order griddle chef in a 1950s-style American diner, requests Marc Crane. No sooner said than done, sir.
img-0006.jpg
17 of 18
The legendary CNET UK Party Bus! All aboard, says Chris Cunningham.
img-0029.jpg
18 of 18
Finally, a portrait of the artist as a hungover man: Rich's self-portrait, as requested by David Stansby.

More Galleries

My Favorite Shots From the Galaxy S24 Ultra's Camera
A houseplant

My Favorite Shots From the Galaxy S24 Ultra's Camera

20 Photos
Honor's Magic V2 Foldable Is Lighter Than Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra
magic-v2-2024-foldable-1383

Honor's Magic V2 Foldable Is Lighter Than Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra

10 Photos
The Samsung Galaxy S24 and S24 Plus Looks Sweet in Aluminum
Samsung Galaxy S24

The Samsung Galaxy S24 and S24 Plus Looks Sweet in Aluminum

23 Photos
Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra Now Has a Titanium Design
The Galaxy S24 Ultra in multiple colors

Samsung's Galaxy S24 Ultra Now Has a Titanium Design

23 Photos
I Took 600+ Photos With the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max. Look at My Favorites
img-0368.jpg

I Took 600+ Photos With the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max. Look at My Favorites

34 Photos
17 Hidden iOS 17 Features You Should Definitely Know About
Invitation for the Apple September iPhone 15 event

17 Hidden iOS 17 Features You Should Definitely Know About

18 Photos
AI or Not AI: Can You Spot the Real Photos?
img-1599-2.jpg

AI or Not AI: Can You Spot the Real Photos?

17 Photos