Hi I'm a total newbie here just got myself a used Wacom Bamboo CTH-470.
I probably already said something to piss everyone off, but oh well.
I'm just gonna take some time to see what kind of drawings I can do with little to no instruction. So I'm not asking for tips on getting started. I know there is a sticky that probably has all of that.
My question is: When drawing with the tablet it won't start creating the line or move the cursor until I have moved a minimum amount. Is there a way to fix this or is that just how digital drawing is/because its a cheap tablet? Because it makes fine details pretty fucking difficult.
I had that same problem before but I don't remember how I solved it. However I did find something relevant.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b_BYCcX0CuM
I'd recommend googling "wacom tablet pen delay" and poking around there to see what works for you.
Best of luck
>>2590487
>he could have paid like $60 more and got a Huion Giano (i.e. easily the second best conventional tablet currently available) instead of Wacom's shittiest
Could what you're describing be a software problem? I have something like the opposite of that happen in Krita for example. After I am done making a stroke the cursor pauses for a second and then snaps to where it's supposed to be. Consider trying out a different brand of trial software (you did say "when drawing" though so that implies that it isn't happening outside of whatever software you're using) and make sure you disable all of windows' touch bullshit.
>>2590699
Whoever sold you that thing should have been giving money to 'you'. A tablet is something you will ideally be using for hours a day for years. Don't be cheap, sell that thing and save up for something better.
https://www.huiontablet.com/huion-wh1409.html
>>2590672
>Huion Giano
>only 160$
W-what? I thought the good tablets were in the 300$ range.
>>2590732
>nani!?
You heard that right.
The Huion Giano is a ((strong)) rival to the Large-size Intuos tablets (the greatest conventional tablets currently available) and is nearly a ((third)) of the price, new (especially if you count add-ons like Wacom's "wireless accessory kit"). Having used both, I can confirm this myself. I must admit the Intuos Large edges it out in some ways, but the price is palatable enough to make up for it. I was so impressed when I first tried it that I now encourage everyone within earshot to buy it in lieu of Wacom's more expensive offerings, and I do it...for free!