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Adonit Pixel (Black) Creative Stylus Pressure Sensitivity Pencil, Point Tip, Palm Rejection, Shortcut Buttons Pen Compatible with iPad/iPad Pro/iPad Air/iPad Mini, iPhone 13/13 Pro/Pro Max/12/11/X/XR

  • Based on 1,407 reviews
Condition: New
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Returnable until Jan 31, 2025

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Availability: Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Mar 6 – Mar 8
Order within 3 hours and 32 minutes
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Features

  • Improved Pixel Point Tip the New and Improved 1.9mm Pixel Point Tip Provides Increased Accuracy and a Paper-like Drag for a Natural Writing and Drawing Experience.
  • Pressure Sensitivity & Palm Rejection with 2048 Levels of Pressure Sensitivity and Enhanced Palm Rejection, the Pixel Writes and Draws Where You Want, How You Want.
  • Shortcut Buttons: The Pixel's Programmable Shortcut Buttons Allow You to Get to Frequently Used Tools like Undo, Redo or Erase, Faster.Grip Sensor: The Pixel's New Grip Sensor Turns It on When You Pick It up, Just Grab and Go
  • Green - pixel is finished charging, orange - low battery, red - dead / recharge. iBT features with Adonit Connected iOS apps. Pixel Compatible Apps-Goodnotes, Photoshop sketch, Procreate, Concepts, Note plus, Illustrator draw, Autodesk sketchbook, Noteledge, Amaziograph, Medibang paint, Zen brush 2, Animation desk, Artrage, Jump paint, Comic draw, Astropad, Tayasui sketches, Musicjot, Intractive sketch book, Pdfpen,Explain everything and Zoomnotes
  • Compatible Devices: iPad mini 6, iPad mini 5, iPad 8, iPad 7, iPad 6, iPad 5, iPad 4, iPad 3, iPhone 13, iPhone Pro, iPhone Pro Max, iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Pro Max, iPhone 12 Pro, iPhone X, iPhone XR, iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone 4s, 5, 5c, 5s, 6, 6 Plus, 6s, 6s Plus, SE, 4, iPad Mini, iPad Mini 2, iPad Mini 3, iPad Mini 4, iPad Air, iPad Air 2, iPad Air 3, iPad Air 4, iPad Pro 2018-2021 (11&12.9)

Description

Welcome to a new standard of stylus. The Adonit pixel has been carefully crafted to work better, write better, and draw better. From the improved 1. 9mm Pixel point tip with paper-like drag, to built in Palm Rejection, The pixel offers a more natural stylus experience. Connect Pixel to your iPad to get over 2000 levels of pressure sensitivity along with shortcut buttons and offset correction. These Bluetooth features reduce lag while increasing accuracy giving you everything you expect and more from Adonit most advanced iPad stylus to date.

Color: Black


Brand: adonit


Material: Plastic, Metal


Number of Batteries: 1 Lithium Polymer batteries required.


Item Weight: 0.04 Pounds


Battery Average Life Standby: 14 Hours


Compatible Devices: iPad mini 6, 5, 8, 7, 4, 3, iPhone 13, Pro, Pro Max, 12, 12 X, XR, 8 Plus, 4s, 5c, 5s, 6 6s, 6s SE, Mini, Mini 2, Air, Air 2018-2021 (11&12.9) See more


Item dimensions L x W x H: 0.41 x 0.41 x 5.91 inches


Are Batteries Included: No


Batteries Required?: Yes


Wireless Type: ‎Bluetooth


Brand: ‎adonit


Item model number: ‎ADPBL


Item Weight: ‎0.64 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎0.41 x 0.41 x 5.91 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎0.41 x 0.41 x 5.91 inches


Color: ‎Black


Number of Processors: ‎1


Battery Type: ‎Lithium-Ion Polymer


Batteries: ‎1 Lithium Polymer batteries required.


Manufacturer: ‎Adonit


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Date First Available: ‎April 27, 2016


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Mar 6 – Mar 8

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • A real rival to the Apple Pencil and works with multiple IOS devices
Color: Black
[Third Update] The more I use this thing, the more impressed I am with it. I now think it's pretty close to the gold standard of the Apple Pencil, but is more useful in some ways. Adding a star. .... Just received the replacement (thank you Amazon. Turnaround, less than week) and now will give the Pixel extra stars and edit my earlier two-star review. It is a great stylus and may deserve five stars. Advertised as competitive with Apple Pencil, it almost is, but not quite. For drawing, there is nothing that competes with the Pencil, which, of course, only works with the Pro. I have both the Pro (12 inch) and a Mini (2015), so I bought the Pixel for use with the Mini, which I use for quick sketches and notes in the field. After some jiggling, I got the Pixel to work with Procreate and Sketchbook (neither of which currently will pair with the Pixel). The Pixel had little or no offset with either app and the delay was minimal. Pressure sensitivity was good. The point was slightly too large for my taste, but drew nice, fine lines and larger lines were equally accurate. I could not detect the ad claim that the point had a more toothy feel (using it with a matte screen protector) but was much better than the Adonit disc stylii. Neither could I get the pen to automatically turn on when I picked it up,[not sure of this now. It may work as advertised, but is too subtle to notice. At any rate it seems to be on when you pick it up.] as the company literature claimed. It has two buttons, one of which turns it on. Both are programmable in supported apps. The nib has a slight wobble to it (undetectable when in use), but I wondered if it was a manufacturing flaw. [apparently it is supposed to have a slight wobble, but the replacement Pixel's wobble is far less noticeable]Two emails to customer support have remained unanswered, [Not true. Their email was sent to an email address that I seldom use. My high regard for their customer service is fully restored ]so I cannot answer that question[It is designed to wobble a bit, according to Adonit's email]. The Pixel deserves [and now gets]at least a four star rating, but unfortunately, it stopped working on the third day of use and I returned it to Amazon, which has a great return policy BTW. As testament to my belief that the Pixel is the best non-Apple stylus out there, I immediately reordered one and will update this review [done]as soon as I have used it more extensively. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 9, 2016 by Jumping Jacks

  • Absolute piece of garbage that will only disappoint you. Save your money!
Color: Black
I should start by saying that I have 2 iPads (original iPad Air and a new iPad 9.7, not the pro) and I use them for note taking regularly. I've always used some form of foam or mesh tipped styluses and I'd been fairly happy with their performance, with the exception that they do not support palm rejection or pressure sensitivity. These are features I have wanted since I first started using the iPad for notes at work, especially palm rejection. The Pixel seemed like a good choice for my first active stylus purchase. He feature set seemed good and I figured I'd get "the best" one if I was to go ahead and make the investment. "Go ahead and get the good one" has been an idea that I've stuck with when making significant purchases. I'll also preface this review by mentioning that I am very technically proficient and am very good with computers and pretty much all things tech. I'm a systems administrator and network engineer at a large company and I've been professionally involved in the IT field for over 20 years. I know how to properly and thoroughly troubleshoot problems with gadgets and computer related devices and I'm very good at it. So, with my credentials out of the way, here is what I have to say about the Adonit Pixel stylus... My choice to buy the Pixel was a total mistake. It is the worst $70 bucks I've spent in recent memory. The only thing this stylus is good at doing is being a total ripoff. I've had it for more than a month and I've tried everything to make it work the way it is advertised. I bought their recommended apps, probably $20-30 worth of them. Tried going back to using my original iPad Air for note taking, as I had read after the purchase there were issues with the new iPad's screens and how they interact with styluses due to Apple doing a fundamental redesign of the way the capacitive touch function operates. Cleaned my screen fastidiously, never had a screen protector on my iPad as I'd heard they interfere with the Pixel (from adonit's site). Always made sure it was fully charged, paired and recognized by whatever app I was using (Notes Plus, Good Notes, Penultimate, the list goes on). After exhausting all possible solutions to making this thing work the way it is described without finding one that worked, which all up has taken me longer than the window for returning the item for a refund, writing this review is the last resort, hoping I can keep others from wasting their money on this hunk of junk. Here are the specific complaints and problems I have with this thing. When taking notes, it only writes about 1/3 of the time you put tip to screen. I would write one word, then after picking up the tip and starting the next word,it simply would stop writing, with or without palm rejection. The only time palm rejection would kinda work would be if I kept my palm entirely stationary, which doesn't happen when you move your hand to write. I'd try to awkwardly write by not touching the screen with anything but the stylus but even then it would not work. Angle, pressure, cleaning the tip or screen, nothing seemed to make a difference. Regarding the pressure sensitivity, it works, but here only seem to be 3 distinct levels of it. Very very light, middle of the road, and super hard. They claim 2048 levels of sensitivity. I experienced nothing like that at all. It was A, B, or C, considering it would write at all! Now, about the two action buttons near the tip, these are an annoyance and obstacle to using it productively at all. Again considering it was working at all. They are in a place where your index fling is at and the front button is generally set to be the undo action, which means that if you write with any kind of pressure or grip it naturally, you're constantly undoing your writing. I know you can reassign the function of the button but constantly performing other actions while I write seems just as bad as undoing strokes immediately after making them. And yes, you could also disable the buttons function in the app options, but then you've got a useless button, not a feature. The second, higher up button is used for turning it on, but the button is black, as is the barrel of pen, which makes it impossible to see, unless you're under laboratory style fluorescent lights. The buttons are also flush with the barrel of the pen so you can't "feel" your way to the button by touch. You just end up squeezing the front of the pen hoping you're on the the button. And if you felt like just tuning it off, foregoing all of its "features" and just using it as an expensive passive stylus, it doesn't work at all. It has to be on to function at all. And to top it off, it is really expensive. More so than pretty much all other styluses. And speaking of other styluses, the fact that Adonit compares this thing with the Apple Pencil is a joke. The Apple Pencil is a device that works. The Adonit Pixel is an expensive metal stick that resembles the Apple Pencil only in that it is pen/pencil shaped. I'd be using one of those, but unfortunately I don't have an IPad Pro. It is now on my list of devices that I want, mainly because writing on a tablet with anything but the Apple Pencil (or the Microsoft Surface's stylus which is also good) is a thoroughly unsatisfying experience. The Adonit Pixel makes it even worse than unsatisfying. It makes it down right aggravating. Trying to thing of something good to say about this thing... It does seem to have good battery life, but what good is that if you can't use it effectively. Even this has a downside, as the charger they supply makes me feel like I'm about to break my USB port with the Pixel sitting in it. And you can only use it with horizontally oriented USB ports (which I do not have on the front of my desktop computer). So I can only use my laptop or an external USB wall wart adapter to charge it. In short, DO NOT BUY THIS DEVICE. The Adonit Pixel does not work advertised, not even in the slightest way. It barely works at all, even in the most basic form. Keep your mushy tipped styluses and save your money for an iPad Pro and Pencil combo if you want to properly take notes on your tablet with a paper like experience. 0 stars, but unfortunately we don't get that option on Amazon. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on September 2, 2017 by Nick Lejejs

  • Ideal Stylus
Color: Black
Adonit Pixel is an ideal stylus when you can’t afford an Apple pen, or your iPad/other Apple products are of older versions and aren’t supported by the latest Apple stylus. The pen is compatible with Tayasui Sketches, which I’ve enjoyed using in the past and present day. Even though Pro Create was not listed as one of the compatible apps, I am still able to use the pen with it, which I’ve gotten used to pretty quick. Palm rejection isn’t supported on Pro Create, but it hasn’t been a problem for me as I rarely lay my palm on the screen when I draw. For others, palm rejection may be a problem when using other apps that are not listed/supported by this stylus, such as pro create (beware). Other than that, the Adonit Pixel is on point with its accuracy and comfort. It comes with a portable USB charger, long battery life, and it is light weight. Great product! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on June 29, 2019 by Sarah

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