The original Animoog was an exciting vision of the future of synths, combining rich Moog sounds with a modern touchscreen interface that let you sculpt audio with your fingers. It’s not so much Crocodile Rock as an entire menagerie – and it’s wonderful.īuy Bandimal ($3.99/£3.99) Animoog Z Synthesizer You can add effects, fire up some drums and gleefully watch your trio of critters count in when loading one of your prior auto-saved compositions. Instruments are emitted from animals – everything from bass-belching whales to body-popping electro-pandas. The set-up’s basic: three tracks, on to which you tap out notes. Instead, Bandimal should be considered a colourful, bonkers, intuitive, entertaining way to make music, whatever your age. Get Captionista (free or $21.99/£19.99 per year)īandimal’s App Store page claims it’s a music composer for kids. Pay and you can nuke the watermark and dig into loads of subtitle themes and styles but even for free, this one’s a must. This breaks the script into chunks that can subsequently be edited and tweaked. You add your script and then tap the screen while playing back your video. This wonderfully conceived app removes the faff from subtitling. This is bad for accessibility – and also from a wider viewing standpoint, given that videos often initially play in silence, and viewers might not be able to turn up the volume to fully appreciate your miniature cinematic epics.Įnter: Captionista. And if you miss one aspect of a PC set-up – the bigger screen – LumaFusion is one of the rare iPad apps that can fully utilise an external display, using it for your preview.īuy LumaFusion ($29.99/£29.99) Captionistaįull-fat video platforms automate subtitles these days, but that’s not the case for social media. We’ve seen pro video editors wide-eyed at the combination of software and hardware, scything through 4K footage in a manner that doesn’t make logical sense when staring at a tablet rather than a powerful desktop PC. On an iPad Pro in particular, LumaFusion shines. Sure, things are a squeeze on the latter, but whatever device you use you gain access to multiple video and audio tracks, a slew of transitions and effects and a powerful titler. ![]() Should Apple’s iMovie not be enough for your Hollywood ambitions, LumaFusion brings desktop-grade editing to your iPad – and even your iPhone. Get Affinity Publisher for iPad ($19.99/£19.99) So as an entry point for the design-curious or a layout tool for jobbing designers on the go, this one’s a good bet at 18 quid. Naturally, there’s integration with Serif’s other tools (which you can also buy, across iPad, Mac and Windows, for a one-off $169.99/£169.99 – for the lot). The interface and tools are optimised for iPad, but you get master pages, guides and grids, advanced typography and design components, asset placement, and plentiful export options. Like Serif’s other Affinity apps, Publisher is full-on desktop-grade fare too. With this app you could conceivably put together an entire issue of Stuff, all while relaxing with your iPad on the sofa. The third app in the Affinity series, Publisher deftly boots into the sea another thing the iPad ‘can’t do’. Power’s there when you need it, though, with grids, layers, and a Zipline feature for easily drawing shapes and lines. ![]() If you just want to doodle, Linia Sketch ($9.99/£9.99 year year or $29.99/£29.99 lifetime) focuses on getting ideas down quickly.
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