>>5736749I never drew from a tut its all rawdog info too many hours...
Couple pointers is figuring out your pen pressure curve or disabling pressure on the brush- Find out what feels right to your hand and lastly dont rape the tablet with hulk grip, thats a lack of experience thing so condition yourself to not do that.
next is figuring out why your pen is "shaky" the reality is if you drew with pen on paper you would see the same thing but its more noticeable inside programs due to the surface interaction (ie whiteboard drawing)
Typically you want to draw from the shoulder/arm not the wrist (large movements) - I don't do that I draw from the wrist and its fucked me, so this means you need to make fast deliberate movements which usually comes down to knowing EXACTLY what you're trying to do with the line. Or alot of ctrl-z. I can't give pointers for that it's an experience thing.
Next is understanding your brush- Why does a pencil seem less shakey? This is mostly interpretation on our brains end you can apply the same thing in photoshop to visualize it for yourself the less "hard" information the more your brain is going to fill in the blanks and by proxy look more deliberate. For hard pen related stuff I tend to use the pen tool for that reason especially with very fine curves. and draw manually when it comes to detail.
Do not blame the program for whats appearing on screen, yes there's glitches, it happens. But most of the time thats your raw input showing on screen. If you're going to use the stabilizer in photoshop lock it at 10% the more you get accustomed to it the less control you're going to have over your movements. And drawing is about control.
There's alot of personality tied into how you move and using the stabilizer function will destroy that so be careful.
pic related all drawing no stabilizer