My 11 year old nephew independently discovered a kind of fun art technique I made up for myself a decade ago - using layers to draw over a photo, and then using the eyedropper tool to grab a flat color and then apply it to a larger region, resulting in a nice illustrated/cel shaded look.
Being a life long doodler myself, I bought him an iPad and an Apple Pencil last year to encourage this kind of play, but was curious that he ignores the Pencil in favor of the fingers nature gave him. This sort of surprised me; when I doodle on my own iPad I NEED the precision of a good stylus... with a fat opaque fingertip it's too hard to make lines meetup. And his lines were fine!
But I put on my UX researcher hat and observed - and in a minute the answer was clear - he pinches and zooms in ALL the time as needed to where the imprecision of a finger doesn't matter. And not just zoom, but rotate to get a more convenient angle for the coloring motion of his fingertips.
Stodgy old me, growing up with pen-on-paper, this wasn't an option. And I never was comfortable with how some iPad art programs made it "too easy" to rotate. (Heck, my current favorite doodle pad Apple Notes doesn't even have zoom in!)
But this next generation - they're touchscreen native in a way I will never be... The kids are alright.
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