Special thanks to the commenters below who are directly responsible for items 7 and 8. Let me know in the comments below! I’m curious if this could get crazier yet… Even the humble Yiynova I use has a remote with programmable keys that can zoom in and out for you. Nowadays, most of the higher end XP-Pen and Huion devices have shortcut keys, slides, and rings on them, too. I included the magic trackpad shortcut, so this hardware is fair game, too.Ĭintiqs have the touch rings that can zoom things in and out as you slide your finger around it. It works in your web browser, so it’ll work in Clip Studio Paint! 8. Generic Keyboard ShortcutsĬTRL +/- will make things bigger and smaller for you. It doesn’t matter what tool you currently are using. The TrackpadĪ two finger swipe up on an Apple Magic Trackpad will zoom out. It follows a sequence of zoom levels like the magnifying glasses along the bottom of the window mentioned before. With this one, you can just click on the screen to zoom in or Option-Click (on a Mac) to zoom out. Draw a rectangle around that area and it will fill the screen, no matter what zoom level it takes. This one is handy when you want to fill the whole screen with a known particular area. The first is the standard slide to the left and right to zoom in and out. It has three different settings, which we’ll be covering here. By default, I believe it’s at the top of your screen. The Zoom Tool can be accessed with the forward slash (“/”) shortcut, or by hitting the magnifying glass icon along the side of the screen. Try our shortened list of 20 basic Clip Studio Paint Pro shortcuts if you just want to get started. (12.5% / 25% / 33% / 50% / 66% / 100% )īonus: That square next to them will put you at 100% view, pixel for pixel. There’s a lot of shortcuts that you can customize in Clip Studio Paint, but we’ll focus on the most important one: Select layer Transparent color Locking layers Clip to layer below Setting the shortcuts Select layer Go to File > Modifier Key Settings Select Common settings Select the shortcut you want for it. You can tap or click on those two glasses to zoom in and out a prescribed distance. 2. The Magnifying Glasses Next to That Slider That rectangle that’s cut in half diagonally will zoom your image in and out as you slide back and forth. Look towards the bottom left corner of the window your image is in. This might just be the most obvious, because it’s always there on your screen. The Slider at the bottom of the main window. I think it would be better for Nomad to adopt a programmable Edge Keyboard like in Clip Studio Paint or a thumb activated Quick Access palette (Clip Studio Paint) or radial menu (Wacom).There are, as it turns out, at least eight different ways I’ve found to zoom into or out of your image. I have looked at programmable VR game pads and the Tap Strap to program hot keys for the iPad but both are more awkward than useful. I need one hand to hold the iPad and one hand to hold the Pencil. Sometimes I’ll prop it up, unfold a portable Bluetooth keyboard and type, but there is no way I can easily draw/paint/sculpt on the couch or in a coffee shop with a keyboard for hot keys. For my next Windows PC 2in1 laptop I will probably buy an app that lets me make custom on screen virtual buttons containing multiple keystrokes. It is faster and simpler to program multiple keystrokes like Command Z to a single button of a Wacom remote or a gaming keypad like the old Nostromo. When I use ZBrush on my Windows PC I use keyboard shortcuts all the time but I do not use a keyboard. I use Nomad on an iPad Pro 12.9” 2018 model.
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