The_Chan wrote:My answer is extremely biased, but I'd stick to traditional art first. Having good base skills in raw media is the key to good art, regardless of whether it is digital or not!
^ I'd agree with this. Work on your base skills and
then get a tablet if digital art is something you're interested in. A tablet isn't inherently better than a mouse - I know some very, very talented digital artists who work with a mouse - although maybe it's easier to adapt to...but there are some things that are easily done traditionally that just aren't possible(or exceedingly difficult) to do digitally, so I find myself preferring traditional work usually. Lack of proper supplies is limiting, alas. :P
Speaking of supplies,
generally it's going to cost more to buy a tablet and the art program you want(although most tablets come with one, at least) than it is to go out and buy some pencils from the dollar store. I'm not taking into account Prismacolors and paints and the like, though - both can be expensive hobbies, but you generally don't have to go out and replace your copy of SAI every month.
As for
my tablet, it's just your basic Wacom, a kinda smallish blue thing that I've had for...close to 6 years now. I used it a
ton up until maybe this year, and it's been chewed on by my dog(the pen is actually missing its eraser part because of her - it still works though!) and battered around by my siblings and recently
stolenadopted by my sister and it's still going strong.