Drawing with Paper

Paper is the drawing app by Fifty Three that has been the sketchbook of choice in our household since its release.

What makes Paper unique is that the app does not have the chrome and visible tool sets that are found in most drawing applications for the iPad (or Android tablets).  The idea behind Paper is simple: remove the standard interface elements and all you are left with is canvas, much like placing a sheet of paper in front of you. You are free to draw and create without having to make decisions about the drawing implement, brush sizes or other UI hindrances. The simple UI frees everyone, young and old, tech savvy or not.

My kids enjoy Paper because the app limits tools and choices; there is a single menu system rather than complicated menu trees. This makes the interaction more approachable and intuitive, flattening the learning curve for the user and making it more enjoyable to use.  Some of the quirks in Paper include the “Expressive Ink Engine” that relies on velocity instead of pressure with a real fountain pen and mastering the two finger “Rewind” feature can be frustrating at times.

Paper is not without its shortcomings. Not being able to lock pages does create instances of errant marks or erasing when revisiting drawings. In early usage, my kids deleted an entire sketchbook rather than a single page. Fortunately, Paper has integrated sharing and posting to Twitter, Facebook and Tumblr into the application. The contents of the deleted sketchbook were posted to my Tumblr prior to its digital demise. In Paper, locking pages and sketchbooks is high on the wishlist of Paper users based on comments posted on Fifty Three’s support forum.

 

Learning Something New

It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change. – Charles Darwin

The new media/interactive landscape shifts every few years; the web evolves and technology evolves with it. It is necessary to adapt and change with these shifts. My next learning goals are to learn how to program using the Arduino open-source microprocessors and how to program using Processing. Books have been borrowed from the library, Adruino boards purchased and a lonely Robo-Sapien awaits to be reanimated.