The five best styluses for iPad
Styluses are just charming utility tool to write, draw, sketch, or navigate on your iPad. When you buy iPad you obviously will choose stylus too and there are few which are quite attractive and useful. Apple Pencil by default is the choice of many. But there are other pens too with rubber, mesh, plastic and disc nibs with great features like palm rejection or pressure sensitivity that require specific iPad models while others can be used on any of Apple’s multi-touch surfaces. Here are the five best styluses for your iPad in 2017 which you can try and see for yourself how efficiently they work.
1. Apple Pencil
Apple Pencil is well known to all. You can get the best drawing and writing experience on your iPad Pro with the Apple Pencil. It’s sensitive to both pressure and tilt, letting you vary your line weights and shading in different apps. It also provides the best palm rejection technology ever seen for a stylus, letting you rest your hand on either the 9.7- or 12.9-inch iPad Pro screen with ease. Underneath the Pencil’s magnetic cap is a Lightning connector for easy pairing and quick-charging with your iPad; you can also connect the included adapter to charge fully via USB. The Pencil provides 12 hours of continuous battery life on a full charge, and is the best stylus you can get for the iPad Pro. You can buy Apple Pencil at Apple store and cost AUD $145.00
2. Adonit Mark
The Adonit Mark is a comfortable and inexpensive option for writing, drawing, and sketching. The mesh-based round stylus doesn’t have the fine control or app integration of the Pencil, but it still works well with most multi touch screens and provides enough resistance to write well without much aberration. The triangular grip sits nicely like an old charcoal stick in the hand, and though you can’t put your hand on the screen, the Mark provides a good counterweight so that the nib doesn’t slip on the glass screen while writing or drawing. You can buy this pencil from Adonit website online at US$9.99 or from Myshopping site at AUD$139.
3. Cosmonaut Wide-Grip Stylus
Cosmonaut Stylus is great for both doodling and writing and features a comfortable, wide grip design that’s wrapped in a soft rubber shell and nib. It shares a similar size to dry erase markers, replicating the sense of drawing on a white board, and it’s great for the young and clumsy. There’s no Bluetooth, charging, or pressure sensitivity with this stylus. You can buy this stylus from Myshopping site online at AUD$49.95
4. Adonit Jot Mini
If you need a compact and easy to store stylus option, then Jot Mini offers a lot of control and is a basic disc-style stylus without a hefty price tag or too much weight. When capped, the Mini is only a few inches in length, but almost doubles in size when the cap is screwed on to extend the body. The disc shape makes it precise and easy to see what you’re writing or drawing, though you will get audible clicking noises from the disc and it can occasionally feel a little slippery on the iPad’s glass screen. You can buy Adonit Jot Mini Stylus at Adonit website at US$19.99 or at Myshopping site at AUD$39
5. Pencil by FiftyThree
Primarily designed for use with the Paper by FiftyThree app, this digital Bluetooth-connected stylus can create lines of all sizes with pressure-sensitive input and supports shading and palm rejection, too. The brushed aluminum graphite build is extremely durable and comfortable to use, featuring a tapered tip and 14k gold plated sensors on each end for an accurate reaction. You can even flip it over to use as an eraser. You can buy this stylus at Amazon store, at Ebay costing AUD $457.21
Now choose the one you wish to have according to your need, iPad device and style.