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It looks like a combination of smart blur, posterization and edge detection (to draw lines). There’s an image of what it looks like in the release notes. Here’s some that I think are important features but I have little to talk about, but you might still find them interesting and even extremely useful. But it’s handy for some other situations. So, this isn’t the increased stabilization that some people were hoping for (I see the question “Can we make the stabilization go past 100?” a lot). At least this will eliminate some of the worse stroke wobble when you draw slowly on them. I imagine this helps a lot for smaller tablets or tablets that have digitizers that have bad accuracy. (The person who tweeted that deleted the tweet though.) Someone from Twitter also helpfully pointed out that, according to the new documentation, this only works with Stabilization set to 30 and below. For example, patterns on a shirt, or buttons, or irises, small letters. It also lets you draw small regular shapes that you have to draw slowly, like small circles or lines or squares. This has the effect of giving you noticeable stabilization on slow strokes, even if your stabilization is set really low or zero, which you’d want for freehand sketches. I’ll update this too if I ever find out what this is for in practical terms, I guess. I can’t seem to notice any difference with both modes? I tried different combinations of both modes, enabled and disabled stabilize by speed, and by different amounts from 6 to 20 to 50 to 100, I drew fast then slow, slow then fast, slow all the way, fast all the way. You have to open the window to find it and make it visible. The setting is per-brush and not shown by default. It supposedly increases the stabilization as you draw more slowly. SAI’s stabilizer is probably the single thing that keeps people from switching to Clip Studio Paint, and I don’t blame them. This particular bullet point caught my eye, mostly because Clip Studio Paint’s stabilizer is sort of a sticking point, especially for people coming from (or still using) Paint Tool SAI. The promise of “someday” continues… Stabilization mode Brad Colbow‘s beta impression ( tweet with sample photos) seems to show that it’s not great in its current state. Update 1: It’s come to my attention that Catalina is not out of beta yet, and with that, Sidecar too. (I don’t see myself going out and buying a Mac and iPad for this.) Hopefully, we can shed some light on it for people who are deciding on their next computer or tablet. I’ll probably update this article at a later date and post some other people’s opinions on it. I wish I had more firsthand experience to talk about it, especially the pen latency and response quality. Maybe this is good for frequent intensive home use more than for light use on the go.) (I’m not actually sure how it measures up. This additionally means that if you weren’t keen on getting Clip Studio Paint on iOS, you could still use the macOS desktop version of Clip Studio Paint, and your iPad as a sort of Cintiq. I think that’s standard behavior with Sidecar. But you can’t use touch on the UI buttons. This update allows you to use the Pencil and touch gestures in Clip Studio Paint. You pair your iPad with your Mac, and you have macOS (10.15) Catalina installed, and iPadOS 13, and you can now use your iPad as a pen display for your Mac. The gist of this is: Clip Studio Paint 1.9.4 now supports Apple’s Sidecar feature. I don’t have the Mac+iPad setup, but let’s get this out of the way! Because for people who do have a Mac and an iPad, this could (if it works well) be the biggest deal in this update. This is a rundown of some notable new features in the recent (2019 September 26) Clip Studio Paint 1.9.4 update.
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