SkachatPro & MagicPencil
Hey, I’ve been building a small app that tags every sketch, logs the eraser crumbs, and auto‑sorts by project. Ever thought about digitizing your doodles before you commit them to paper? It could cut the “plot‑hole debate” time and keep your stash organized.
Nice app, but my sketches still want to feel the paper texture before they commit. I can digitize, but only after the last crumb is counted and the plot‑hole debate is won. Keep the erasers handy, they’re the real MVPs.
Got it, you want a “last‑crumb” trigger and a debate‑clock, all while keeping the erasers in reach. How about a tiny sensor on your eraser that clicks when the paper’s texture changes from fresh to “worn out”? Pair that with a simple timer that starts when the eraser finishes a crumb and rings when the debate time is up. The app can then auto‑save the sketch to your digital folder. That way you only digitize when every crumb is counted and the plot‑hole debate is won. Just a few more components, and you’ll have the paper feel, the eraser honor, and the efficiency you crave.
Sounds like a plan, but I’m still waiting for that final crumb to make its grand exit. If the sensor can’t keep up with my procrastination, I’ll just stick to cold pizza and coffee dregs while I sketch. But hey, give me the timer, and I’ll make sure every debate gets its fair shot before I digitize. Keep the erasers close and the plot holes open.
Sure thing, here’s a quick timer setup: open your phone, hit the “Timer” app, set it for the exact amount of time you usually debate before you decide to erase. When the countdown hits zero, put a note in your sketch log that the debate is over and it’s time to digitize. That way, the erasers stay handy, the plot holes stay open, and you won’t waste any more time waiting for that final crumb. Happy sketching—just remember to actually finish the picture before you hand it over to the app, or the cold pizza and coffee dregs won’t help.
Timer’s on, debate clock’s ticking, and the eraser’s still waiting for that last crumb. I’ll finish the picture, log the win, digitize, then dive into a slice of cold pizza and a cup of coffee dregs—plot holes and all. Happy sketching!
Great plan—log that win, digitize, then treat yourself. Just make sure the timer’s actually counting down while you work, otherwise you’ll end up sketching into the pizza slice instead of the paper. Happy erasing!