Welcome to the official Xencelabs channel. Here you can find reviews in our playlists, product information, support videos, tutorials, and community videos.
We’re a new global company with decades of combined experience across a range of creative industries. We specialize in the graphic tablet market and develop tools where the details make the difference. We deliver premium digital design solutions that offer more value to the professional creative.
Our products include a Pen tablet, 3 button pen, Thin pen, Quick Keys shortcut remote, and more on the way!
Well I got it working but every time I quit Photoshop and reopen it I have the same issue again! I believe it's a Photoshop issue and not a Xencelabs but its frustrating none the less
Mine isn't working! I'm on a 16" M1 MacBook Pro. I have the exclamation point nester to where is says pen pressure in photoshop. I have photoshop added to my security settings/accessibility. It used to work and now it stopped. How do I fix this?
Amazing specs indeed love how it’s only single cable for both data and power and it looks sleek xence labs should take the credit to be the first to introduce an oled 4k display that only needs a single cable
I’m currently thinking between this and the Movink but one thing I wanted to say is that I think it’s a shame that one of the pens has that bulbous, rounded end that goes right to the nib. I don’t know if that is an off-the-shelf component as I’ve seen what looks like an identical design on various cheaper pen displays, but it simply isn’t that usable when tilting the pen. I don’t get why both pens don’t have the gradual curving of the enclosure that the other pen has. For me I know without using it that that pen would have zero utility for me.
Since switching to a Xencelabs medium tablet bundled with the Quickeys, I don't remotely miss my Wacom. I'm not a Wacom hater by any means, but Xencelabs make great gear!
And still no 120Hz. Even its OLED. So disappointing. Not going to buy any 60Hz Monitors or Drawing Displays in 2024 anymore. Apple offers 120Hz Tablets since 2017 and you Guys trying to sell !Displays! (not even a standalone Computer) with 60Hz in 2024. What a shame.
Very few people have the muscle control to hold the pen at 1 g. I would guess the majority of artists are around 10 to 20 g at the light end. For a heavy-handed artist, much more than that.
@@VocalMike I'm not sure where you get that from... plenty of artists use pens and pencils for getting hair thin lines, hatching, light shading so they would develop that control easily. Especially light shading with pencil using circular side motions. Anyone who has practiced a value scale in graphite has this control, they're just making it less lifelike for professional artists (and 3g is on the upper end of bad, huion has 2g). People who are heavy handed usually death grip the pen which shouldn't be encouraged anyway, as well as faster wear on your pen tip and tablet surface. Not a good reason to not improve the pen IAF, if someone feels its too light they can turn up the sensitivity, but no matter how low you turn it down on a bad pen it won't make a line when it should like a real tool and feels much less natural. People who do stippling art I'd definitely recommend against anything with 3g IAF like xp pen.
@@lesnacke I agree that the capability for lighter is always better so you have the choice but that most artists would struggle to maintain a consistent 1g pressure. A 3-button pen is around 17g and you'd have to use muscle control to continually lift 16g to get a 1g on the surface. It's quite easy to measure one's ability by getting a kitchen or postal scale that measures in grams. When I try to draw at the lightest, I cannot maintain 1g consistently. When trying for 1g, I vary between 1 and 8g with most of the time around 5g. If I had to do that for any length of time it would be very tiring. Admittedly there will be some much more talented individuals than me who are more consistent but that is my experience. Remember too that the purpose of a pressure curve, which can be adjusted is to make it more comfortable to get extremely thin lines with less effort. If your natural sweet spot for drawing is say, 8g, you can adjust the pressure curve so that 8g will produce a very fine line indeed, without as much tension on your muscles.
I’m just wondering how the 2year warranty would work - I live in Australia. I can choose Australia in the shop but the payment is still displayed in US $ so it seams everything is based in the US. Wacom has a “Wacom Australia eStore” prices are listed in AUD, this gives me more confidence regarding warranty.
It is a sexy looking product, and one cable connect is cool... but considering it's more expensive than a M4 Ipad pro, I will add $400 to get the 24-inch model.
Cool to see. Im all for Xence and Huion to overtake as standard. (Confused how we get Xence from sense 😂 not the best idea for marketability and searching tbh)
Pen Display 16 looks really thin and amazing! I have the Pen Display 24, and I love it. It's always worked smoothly. It's really cool to see a newer and more portable version.
Wish this was in 16:10, or 4:3 aspect ratio. On a screen below 20 inch the 16:9 feels too wide and not enough space top to bottom. When will all drawing display brands learn this... Only XP Pen seems to understand that (with their latest models).
I'm confused on the portability part. The man said he could be creative anywhere like on his couch, but wouldn't he still have to be connected to a PC?, laptop? or does this have a built in drawing program where you could really use it anywhere???