

I opened Sketchbook Pro and put my traced version of the doodle on one layer and the screenshot on another layer.

I might have done more work than I had to here, but I was just winging it so this is the best I could come up with. Here you can see the drawing layer and the photo layer. Just look at those yummy vectors in comparison. It certainly helps to zoom in a lot when you’re tracing over a sketchy line. The screen will do a little blink like it’s taking a photo and your screenshot will be saved in your photo app. Oh yeah, to take a screenshot on your Ipad just hold down the power button then hit the home button. Adobe Ideas is awesome because it automatically turns every line you draw into a vector image. I took a screenshot of my Fat Tag doodle and opened the image in Adobe Ideas to trace over the pixelated sketchy lines. I just love “behind the scenes” stuff and assume everybody else does too. I’ve tried out a bunch of them and have whittled down the list to comprise only my favorites.įor this doodle session I used the following apps, in this order:īy no means is this post intended to be a tutorial, so I won’t be getting in depth on any of the steps. There are a lot of drawing apps available in the Apple App Store. Lucky for me, making art is my job, so I can call doodle time “working”. When I get frustrated with my inability to get three stars in every level of Angry Birds that exists I try to make some of my Ipad time productive. I find myself killing a lot of time with that thing in my hands.
