![]() ![]() This digital coloring book is ideal for stress-busting. Get Ferrite Lake (free or $39.99/£39.99 per year) On iPad, the extra space makes editing much simpler. On iPhone, it’s ambitious and impressive. Even for free, it’s quality stuff, but pay the IAP and the full range of features is unleashed. Initially resembling a souped-up Voice Memos, Ferrite quickly reveals itself to be a full-fat podcasting studio. It’s perfectly suited to iPad and Apple Pencil. You can annotate, add links, reuse elements, quickly navigate documents, and work with custom paper. This app lets you seamlessly mix handwriting, typed elements and drawings. You might like Apple’s Notes, but it’s a toy compared to GoodNotes. On iPad, you can stare at bigger cover art and a more usable interface too. They can be grouped and marked as loaned, while you stare guiltily at your to-read list. This app helps you keep tabs on your books, whether they’re made of paper or lurk inside apps. Tweetbot is smarter: its second column can be customized, so you can switch it between search results, a list feed, your mentions, or even direct messages. On iPad, the official Twitter app uses extra available screen space to list trending articles. Get NetNewsWire Tweetbot ($5.99/£5.99 per year) NetNewsWire is sleek and speedy on every device, but on iPad you get the advantage of multi-column views to more rapidly blaze through your inbox. More people should use RSS – it’s an effective way to keep track of news outlets you care about and never miss a headline. On iPad, the interface has room to breathe as you craft a Hollywood hit. On iPhone, it’s a marvel – but fiddly and claustrophobic. Sync over iCloud lets you work on any device, but you’ll prefer tapping out your masterpieces on an iPad – especially if you own a Magic Keyboard.Īpple’s iMovie is great for quick video edits, but LumaFusion heads into pro territory, with a wealth of high-end features and effects. They can be stashed, tagged, stitched together in various ways, and exported – hopefully as a best-seller. This writing app is designed as a place for all of your words. Get Korg Gadget Ulysses ($39.99/£39.99 per year) On iPad, though, you can see more of everything, and – importantly – more easily play those virtual instruments. It’s packed full of wonderful drum machines and synths, and has a sequencing workflow that helps you compose at speed. Our favorite music-making app is a minor miracle on iPhone. But on iPad, you get a more expansive canvas, toolbars that don’t obscure your view, and Apple Pencil support. On iPhone, it’s like having an entire artist’s toolkit at your fingertips. This drawing and painting app offers an unreasonable number of tools for a freebie. On iPad, you can dig into adjusting nodes and adding imagery, while making use of handy stashable palettes. On iPhone, you can edit full mind maps, but you’re better off jotting down items in outline view. This mind-mapping app is smartly optimized for each device. Get Portal MindNode (free or $19.99/£19.49 per year) Naturally, imagining yourself by a gorgeous mountainside or before a crackling fire is better when the video fills more of your field of view, like on iPad. ![]() Whereas rivals bathe your ears with audio recordings from far-flung places, Portal treats your eyes too. This chill-out app is all about immersion. Get Pixelmator Photo Portal (free or $49.99/£34.99 per year) On iPad, you get more space for your snaps, alongside a bevy of on-screen adjustment sliders. But Pixelmator Photo also has single-tap machine-learning buttons to speed things along. Sure, you could spend hours fine-tuning photos, using all the filters and controls in this superb app. Get Carrot Weather Pixelmator Photo ($23.99/£23.49 per year) ![]()
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