How Apple, Painter and Wacom changed everything

Today I received the book Secrets of Corel Painter Experts, and at the beginning, they wrote about Painter’s history: how it all started with Mark Zimmer’s introduction of the new Wacom Tablet and how he put a microscope to pencil sketches and measured the colour of felt pen combinations. I could follow the steps in Painter’s development, because ”I was there”. No, I wasn’t in California – I haven’t yet visited that part of the world, but I followed everything from Sweden, so when I read about it, I had my own memories from that time, and it made me think about how I get really hooked on the digital world.

My first encounters with computers were confusing. Strange machines with MS/DOS? Once, a teacher talked about programming when I was about 16. Was I interested? No. Later, a really boring course for teachers – write, erase, write, copy, paste, I understood everything in a blink, and then I had to wait for the rest of the group… In 1988, I moved to Växjö to study market communication, and we learned to work with statistics in MS/DOS. I didn’t like it at all.

Fortunately, I met Roine, and we started talking about the Apple Macintosh. Believe it or not, in April 1989, our first Apple Mac Plus with an external disk drive was delivered to our apartment. We were so excited and surprised, because it was so easy to install the system and everything worked out fine. Weren’t computers supposed to bring trouble? Maybe we had done something wrong? Because it should be harder, shouldn’t it?

We loved our Mac Plus, and we became big Apple fans. With my background as a pedagogue, I was fascinated by the user interface, which was welcoming, friendly, and easy. I am not sure when I bought my first version of Fractal Design Painter, but I know that I started with Fractal Design Sketcher because I couldn’t afford Painter, and by then, we had bought new Macs a couple of times.

I think I first got my hands on a Wacom tablet and Painter 3 around 1993–94. That totally changed my comprehension of what computers could mean to me. From that moment, computers weren’t about techno-guys and pointless, boring use – it was about creating. Okay, I had got a glimpse of the creative possibilities when using our Mac for writing. But to draw and paint naturally, like in Painter – that was magic!

With Painter and a Wacom tablet, I could hold a pen in my hand and work with chalk, oil, ink or watercolour on my computer. I could choose between different textures for my digital canvas. I was so amazed. And I think I still am. I have never stopped talking about this sensational feeling because I want others to experience it too. If you like to draw and paint Corel Painter is like a candy store.
Oh, did you notice the name change? Mark Zimmer sold Painter to Corel in 2000. The program has continued to develop since then, and there is still no other art software that can compete with Painter. Some people use Photoshop, but as the name suggests, it was originally developed for photos. That is not the same.
Now I will read my book, Secrets of Corel Painter Experts, and enjoy the 17 artists showing their ways to work with Painter.

Åsa Stenström

Market communication consultant

I live and work on Gotland, Sweden’s biggest island, right in the middle of the Baltic Sea. I’m interested in many things and somehow I happened to start four blogs with different content.

Asa In the Middle of the World is in English and is also about life on this island, but the content has changed to be more about Apple. I’m very interested in Apple and since 1989 I’m a Happy Apple User.