

After fiew testes, It seems that the problem is linked to my two screens. Everything is freshly updated and working correctly except with storyboard pro 6. I also did the same for the video drivers. I have unistall all wacom drivers and files, checked and installed the most recent. When I draw, there is a slippage between the location of the pointer and where the line appears. Steve Schnier at the Toronto International Film Fe.I’m trying the free version of storyboard pro 6, downloaded the 24 th of july 18 (why this date, because this topic has 4 old years…but it seems that the problem is still actual) My computer is runing with Windows 10, and I have a wacom intuos pro tablet which has worked and still does with any other softwares and earlier versions of storyboard pro with mac or PCs (I use it for my job).I agree with production companies that using Cintiqs will speed the flow through their pipeline, but the trade off-for now-will be pretty boards and I miss the scratch of the pencil on the paper. Other knowledgeable board artist have recommended Sketchbook Pro for better line weight and I have had success with PS CS2 and Painter, but neither provides the data management of Storyboard Pro. They should be working document with tape, morticed panels, glue stick scum and eraser smears. It makes for less pretty boards, but I not a fan of the pretty board. This creates a "hairy" look to the clean-up that I'm hoping with practice will lessen. Because of the artifacts that occasionally occur when I draw too fast, I must "sketch" the line more, not sweep the arm like they told us in art school.

I have learned to work with bright overheads on to mitigate the glare (glow?) The quality of the cleanup line in this software is a bit of a problem. I used to be able to board for 8-10 hours a day if I was swamped. And, I used to have to wrap a bandage on my wrist to help give me support.

As a result, the Lecia to be more “client-friendly” which allows them to see better what the board is saying. It saves all that photocopying I used to do. It has a great way of dealing with location and prop design directly from the production into the board.

The software allows much better control of trace back and reuse of elements. produce a Lecia quickly.) On the first board I did this way, the Producer was excited that the board made it to Lecia in half a day from delivery. This allows my client to translate the board quickly into their pipeline (i.e. The help is mostly through the way the software (Storyboard Pro) can output to pdf, quicktime,or EDL. I've been on a Cintiq since April and I find it both helpful and painful.
