PenPad Review: The perfect accessory for iPad artists who use Procreate

Posted:
in iPad edited December 2021
If you're an artist who works in Procreate, PenPad will save you time, effort, and wrist strain.




Recently, PenTips reached out to inform me about the PenPad Kickstarter. I took a look at the device and found it intriguing. It promised to help expand the capabilities of Procreate by breaking out some of the shortcuts onto a physical, number-pad-like device.

As someone who works exclusively on iPad for digital art, I knew I had to see if PenPad lived up to the hype.

A brief history of my experience with graphics tablets and transitioning to the iPad Pro

As someone who loosely identifies as an artist, I've spent two decades of my life collecting various digital art tools in an attempt to find something that worked for me. For most of my life, that has meant compromising in one area to prioritize another.

My first graphics tablet was a 21-inch off-brand tablet. It was bulky and looked very Y2K inspired -- and never worked particularly well with the already-aging family computer.

It didn't take me long to start buying Wacom tablets, which I used nearly exclusively from 2005 until 2018. I found the tablets useful, but they still had plenty of limitations.

The Intuos line Wacom offered wasn't super portable, say, the way a sketchbook is, and they required you to develop the skill of drawing on your desk while looking at your computer screen.

Drawing tablets with screens exist, but they have their own drawbacks. The Wacom One, for example, requires four individual cables combined into an unruly behemoth called the X-Shape cable. It features an HDMI cable, a USB-C cable, a USB-A cable, and a wall power cable, all of which tether your computer to a single spot on your desk very effectively. If you have a computer that primarily features USB-C slots, you'll need adapters or a dock. This unruliness only compounds if you're someone who needs their computer to be portable.

It wasn't until I got my first iPad Pro in 2018 that I found something that completely clicked for me. It was an older iPad Pro and utilized the first-generation Apple Pencil, but paired with Procreate, it felt like the first digital art setup that intuitively made sense.

Being able to take my iPad with me, rather than worrying about carting a graphics tablet and a laptop around, was incredible. I could work outside, at the library, on the bus, at my parents' house, in a coffee shop -- pretty much anywhere, provided I had enough battery to do so. I've since upgraded to an iPad Air 4 with a second-generation Apple Pencil, and I haven't looked back.

And, for good reason. I use Procreate. It's fast and responsive, and unlike Photoshop, which was my previous digital art app of choice, it is actually designed for digital painting and illustration. And, yes, other programs exist, and people have used them to great effect, but for $9.99, Procreate is a powerhouse that digital artists shouldn't overlook.

But there was one area that Wacom edged out the iPad: the side panel buttons. If you're a digital artist, you live and die by your shortcut buttons.

And sure, Procreate offers a decent amount of gesture controls for things like undo, redo, and fullscreen, but many of the most used options required you to meander around the screen until you found your menu option. Not only did this add extra time to my projects, but it could also become a bit painful as it would cause repetitive wrist strain for specific actions.

However, thanks to PenTips, the iPad just leveled the playing field.

Enter the PenPad

PenPad is a physical shortcut panel for Procreate. You may be saying, "Why would I want to spend money on a tool that can only be used with a single app -- that seems silly!"

But I am here to tell you that it is not. If you're one of the countless artists who have moved on to using Procreate as their primary art app, a shortcut panel for it makes a lot of sense. And, if you visit their Kickstarter page, you'll see that lots of other people agree, too.

What PenPad Does

As stated, PenPad is a physical shortcut panel that provides access to 23 shortcuts, including, but not limited to...

There are over 20 shortcuts packed into the PenPad!
There are over 20 shortcuts packed into the PenPad!
  • Fullscreen toggle

  • Opening/Closing the layer panel

  • Opening/Closing the color panel

  • Decrease/Increase your brush size

  • Cut, Copy, and Paste

  • The eyedropper tool

  • Undo and Redo

  • Selections

  • and more!
Instead of constantly looking around the screen to find the shortcut you need, you can just reach over with your non-dominant hand, tap the shortcut button you want, and be on your way.

It just works. Period.

I was a little skeptical that it would work as well as advertised. After all, you're just supposed to pair it with your iPad. There's no setup, no additional apps to download, nothing to do in Procreate itself. Just pair and go.

Well, as it turns out, it is that easy. I opened my iPad's Bluetooth settings, paired the PenPad, and opened Procreate. A quick tap of the Fullscreen toggle worked as advertised. Tapping the undo and redo button worked, too.

The PenPad is just as portable as your iPad
The PenPad is just as portable as your iPad


In fact, everything I tried worked as advertised, and while it will take a while to build up the muscle memory to learn where each shortcut button is, it's already made working with Procreate faster, easier, and less stressful on my wrists.

PenPad review - Overall

If you are an artist who primarily uses Procreate, I cannot stress how good PenPad is. I tend to be a bit critical of tools geared toward artists because they don't often make vast improvements, but PenPad is, quite possibly, my ideal supplementary iPad art tool.

It does exactly what is advertised, and if I had to nit-pick what I don't like about it, the only critical thing I could come up with is that it uses micro USB to charge it, rather than USB-C.

Where to buy

If you're looking to grab a PenPad, head over to their Kickstarter page. The project is already fully funded and PenTips, the designers of PenPad, are planning on shipping units in February 2022.

You can snag your own for about $72, though it's based on your local currency (the early bird pricing is 63 Euros, with an increase to 65 euros for non-early bird pricing.) After the campaign ends, PenPad will retail for $100 (84 Euros).

While AppleInsider requires hardware in-hand to cover crowd-funded projects from relatively new creators, our review is no guarantee that the product will ship in the timetable that the creators have promised, or at all.

Rating: 5 out of 5

Pros
  • Small enough to travel with iPad

  • Performs 23 shortcuts for Procreate

  • Reduces wrist strain from common actions

  • Five day battery life

  • Works out of the box

  • Saves time and effort
Cons
  • Uses micro USB to charge, rather than USB-C
Read on AppleInsider
Gary_Slocum

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 7
    DAalsethDAalseth Posts: 2,783member
    Looks good, I can see where this would be very handy. I've moved over the the iPad/ApplePencil/and Procreate after years of drawing on desktop computers. It's so much more natural. Just pick up the pencil and draw. Just like an actual sketchbook, except you can pinch to zoom and get the details. 

    One O/T question. What is the keyboard case shown in the first picture. I have an iPad Pro on the way and am weighing the various options.
    edited December 2021
  • Reply 2 of 7
    AmberNeelyAmberNeely Posts: 14member, moderator

    One O/T question. What is the keyboard case shown in the first picture. I have an iPad Pro on the way and am weighing the various options.

    That's actually an Apple Magic Keyboard for the 11-inch iPad Pro (or the iPad Air 4). Honestly, the thing is one of the biggest improvements to my mobile workflow. It has a USB-C port in it that can charge your iPad while you're using it, and then, should you want to pull it off the keyboard, it's magnetic so it just pops right off. It's extremely handy if you're someone who swaps back and forth between needing a keyboard and needing to use your iPad in a more handheld way, I think that it's one of the best options. Being able to just swap from one mode to the other on the fly is awesome.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 3 of 7
    DAalsethDAalseth Posts: 2,783member

    One O/T question. What is the keyboard case shown in the first picture. I have an iPad Pro on the way and am weighing the various options.

    That's actually an Apple Magic Keyboard for the 11-inch iPad Pro (or the iPad Air 4). 
    Oh, from that angle I would never have guessed. Pictures usually show it from the side. I really would like the Magic Keyboard. All the reviews put it at the top of the list for keyboard cases. All that's holding me back is the price. Here in Canada it's $450 for the 12.9 inch version. Other then that it's wonderful. Thanks.
    edited December 2021 watto_cobra
  • Reply 4 of 7
    Do they not have regular keyboard shortcuts for these keys?  Because you’re showing it next to the keyboard and that doesn’t make a ton of sense if so. 
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 5 of 7
    Mike WuertheleMike Wuerthele Posts: 6,861administrator
    Do they not have regular keyboard shortcuts for these keys?  Because you’re showing it next to the keyboard and that doesn’t make a ton of sense if so. 
    This exists for the same reason a numeric keypad does. Sometimes it's more convenient for the user to have everything local on a smaller keypad, and in the case of keyboard shortcuts, minus chording with a control or command key.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 6 of 7
    Honestly, the author has not known love until getting an iPad Pro 12.9” with the new Pencil 2 and a Zugu case. I am currently pushing for an iPad Pro 14.7”! ProCreate is a great and fairly easy art sketcher to use but I recently moved to an Adobe Fresco based workflow and I got the bundle with Photoshop. I went back to Procreate to be sure I had all my work transferred in to Adobe. One of Mark’s email’s (Pentips) talked about brushes installing in Procreate but it was a nightmare. I told him I wanted it for Adobe Fresco but no soap. But installing brushes in Fresco is a cakewalk. If that Pentips machine had a way to use it with Adobe Fresco, I’d do it in a heartbeat. After all, most of the same functions are in each. I remember Adobe dropped Ps for a couple years in iOS because they didn’t think iPads were a ‘thing.’ So they’re eating crow and coming to the game now with some dynamite app development. With Apple’s legendary ecosystem of sharing, it’s a very forward endeavor. I love the Pentips stuff so far as I have the tips and the art glove to keep the screen from activating something. I like the feel of the Apple Pencil 2 so did not get their gripper.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 7 of 7
    LeilaLeila Posts: 1member
    Do you by any chance know if they would consider having it work for other design softwares? Maybe adobe ones like photoshop and fresco? It would be a lot more handy than only being made for procreate. Personally I got used to the Adobe products a long time ago and I still like to use them even on the iPad..
    edited January 2022
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