HUION KAMVAS Pro 16 Drawing Tablet with Screen, Full-Laminated Graphics Drawing Monitor, Pen Display with Battery-Free Stylus Tilt 6 Express Keys Touch Bar, 15.6 inch

£209.5
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HUION KAMVAS Pro 16 Drawing Tablet with Screen, Full-Laminated Graphics Drawing Monitor, Pen Display with Battery-Free Stylus Tilt 6 Express Keys Touch Bar, 15.6 inch

HUION KAMVAS Pro 16 Drawing Tablet with Screen, Full-Laminated Graphics Drawing Monitor, Pen Display with Battery-Free Stylus Tilt 6 Express Keys Touch Bar, 15.6 inch

RRP: £419.00
Price: £209.5
£209.5 FREE Shipping

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Well in this case, I think it’s close enough to the advertised value to not be an issue, but they should really just figure out how to measure it themselves and advertise measured numbers instead. I have never experienced eye pain from looking at a monitor, so I have no way of knowing if either of them will hurt your eyes or not. The tablet feels sturdy when performing a twist test, where I grab both sides of the tablet and try twisting the tablet a bit with just my hands. I personally know about the pen/brush function issue as it’s a design flaw in XP-Pen’s drivers, but all she had to do was press the pen/brush function one more time to “cancel” eraser mode, and it would no longer jump back to the eraser tool every time she tried to draw.

Usually you will want to uncheck the “Enable Windows Ink” option to prevent Windows Ink from messing with your drawing. I usually use my tablets at around a 35 degree angle, and this stand just so happens to skip right over that angle.

By doing this, you should be able to use the tablet in left-handed mode with the shortcut keys on the right instead of the left. The tablet stand which comes with tablet is a bit lackluster (note: the tablet stand is optional and is included/not included based on the seller). It's just slightly thicker compared to my phone, and most certainly thinner compared to most laptops. This means that the Huion Kamvas Pro 16 certainly lives up to its name of being a “Pro” tool in terms of its colour capabilities.

With Wacom’s tablets, they have pen calibration pretty figured out thanks to their years of experience making tablets, so the cursor stays almost perfectly under the pen nib no matter what angle/direction you tilt the pen. Most people who look at art online don’t use amazing monitors which have higher than 100% sRGB anyways, so the colours you see on your 100% sRGB or higher monitor are often not seen by the general audience since their own monitors aren’t capable of seeing it. However, the default calibration is already pretty good with the fully-laminated display, so for the first while, I did not use the calibration tool. Based on your review I decided to go for the Huion but went for the Premium version, not sure if that is just a updated version of the Pro, only difference I could see was the claim on Gamut: 150% sRGB.

However, if you only saw a few people (something like only 3-4 people), then I doubt it’s a widespread problem and it’s either: 1) they got a defective cable, or 2) they use it at a bad angle which causes it to break quickly. I do like the look of the XP Pen a bit better, and the extra shortcut buttons are appealing, but the line wobble/jitter is concerning (and I’m still thinking about the parallax, no matter how non-existent the difference is). It is a bit inconvenient that the power cable needs to be connected to a power outlet for the tablet to work considering that there are other 15. Huion advertises this tablet as a 120% sRGB monitor, and from my measurements, this appears to be a truthful claim.

This review will focus on the KAMVAS Pro 16 while I have another review that focus on the KAMVAS 16. This test is meant to see the smoothness of the pen pressure taper when going from max to min pressure quickly. There’s also an option to save different profiles manually using the import and export buttons in the “About” section. This new pen calibration which takes pen tilt into account is actually really nice since the cursor always stays under the pen nib even when using the pen from a different angle than usual. Pro because every other aspect is quite good, but the issue is present and I’ve been urging XP-Pen to fix it since it affects all their tablets, not just the XP-Pen Artist 15.When looking at the display, it really does seem like the image is on the surface, just like a typical PC monitors. Pro is more than usable how it is and is quite a great tablet, however, I personally feel that the Huion Kamvas Pro 16 is better because it has slightly better drawing capabilities (no tapering issue, pen calibration with uses tilt, and slightly better pen tilt), and it is also built and designed better (L-shaped cable which has good weight support, and aluminum alloy back). Huion has told me they are working on fixing this, and it wasn’t a big enough issue to affect my drawing at all, so I’m just mentioning it in passing.



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