The best iPhone apps of 2023

The best art and design apps for iPhone

Why you can trust TechRadar We spend hours testing every product or service we review, so you can be sure you’re buying the best. Find out more about how we test.

Our favorite iPhone apps for painting, drawing, sketching, design and animation.

(Image credit: The Iconfactory)

 Linea Sketch

  • Free or $0.99/99p/AU$1.49 per month

Linea Sketch is a sketching app that brings you a near-perfect balance of power and control, so you can quickly capture ideas. Whether scribbling with a finger or a stylus, the app is fast, responsive, and a joy to use.

From a tools standpoint, this iPhone app has just enough, and doesn’t overload you: a few brushes; layers with import capabilities; a smartly designed space-efficient color picker. A blank canvas is the default start point, but there are templates and grids if you need them. There’s also the excellent ZipLine, which when you pause after drawing a line or shape automatically fixes wobbly lines into regular ones.

For free, you get the chance to try out the main features indefinitely - even sharing your masterpieces as time-lapse video recordings. Grab the IAP and you can remove watermarks on your exported artwork.

Imaengine Vector

Imaengine Vector

  • Free + $2.99/£2.99/AU$4.99

Imaengine Vector is a camera app/photo editor. Take a shot – a selfie, your lunch, or an amazing landscape – or load an image, and it’s turned into a vector drawing. That in itself perhaps isn’t anything special, but what else the app does very much is.

First and foremost, some of the predefined filters are spectacular. Even the dullest of pics when fed through this app can end up looking like art. The settings can be tweaked, too, including detail levels, colors, and line thickness. If that’s not enough, tap the Editor button and you end up in a full-fledged vector graphics editor.

The interface is a bit messy on iPhone, and the editing section might baffle. But even for the filters, it’s worth the outlay, and for illustrators happy to tweak the app’s output, it’s a bargain.

Comic Life 3

Comic Life 3

  • $4.99/£4.99/AU$8.99

Comic Life 3 is for creating comics from photos and other images on your iPhone. Although it works best on the bigger screen of an iPad, it’s surprisingly usable on an iPhone, not least due to the sheer speed at which you can put together a great page (or, if you’re feeling ambitious, a full multi-page book).

Much of this is down to the app’s varied templates, which get you up and running in no time. You can quickly import pictures into frames, add speech bubbles and sound effects, and then export the lot to a variety of different formats.

Oddly, the one thing the app does badly is comic-style filters – you’re better off using Prisma for that. But for making custom comics from doodles or photos of amazing days out, Comic Life 3 can’t be beaten.

Procreate Pocket

Procreate Pocket

  • $4.99/£4.99/AU$7.99

Procreate Pocket is a great bet if you fancy dabbling in digital finger-painting. Whether you’re a novice scribbler or a jobbing artist, this app’s sleek interface wants to get out of your way and let you paint.

The toolbar that runs along the top of the display provides fast access to brushes. At the left of the screen are two sliders, for adjusting brush size and opacity. If you find them distracting, a four-finger tap puts you in full-screen mode, leaving you alone with your miniature masterpiece.

It all feels fluid and sleek, but there’s depth here too. A fantastic brush editor (including custom grain sources) unleashes all kinds of creativity, and the layers system provides scope for more advanced compositions. And when you get really good, you can share time-lapse recordings created automatically by Procreate Pocket, and await glory when a TV network comes calling.

Graphic

Graphic

  • $2.99/£2.99/AU$4.49

On the iPad, Graphic resembles a touchscreen take on desktop vector powerhouse Adobe Illustrator. You might think you’d need to be mad to try and squeeze that into an iPhone, but Indeeo has succeeded in fine style.

The app, equally happy in portrait and landscape, is initially set up for vector-based sketching, with you scribbling freehand lines that can subsequently be tweaked and edited. Smartly, the app always lets you know what’s going on under your finger, because Graphic shows that area elsewhere on the screen while you draw.

Delve deeper and you’ll find a shape library, Bézier curves, a layers system and everything else you need to craft illustrations and logos on your iPhone. It can be a touch fiddly at times, but the powerful zoom and general friendliness, of what’s a hugely powerful mobile app, help immeasurably.

Pixelmator

Pixelmator

  • $4.99/£4.99/AU$7.99

Photoshop is so ingrained in people's minds when it comes to image editing that it's become a verb. Oddly, though, Adobe's largely abandoned high-end mobile apps, choosing instead to create simpler 'accessories' for the iPhone and iPad, augmenting rather than aping its desktop products. Valiantly filling the void is Pixelmator, a feature-rich and truly astonishing mobile Photoshop.

It's packed full of tools and adjustment options, and works well whether you're into digital painting or creating multi-layered photographic masterpieces. On iPhone, Pixelmator's naturally a bit cramped compared to using the app on iPad, but at the price it remains an insanely great bargain.

TOPICS
Read more
Three phones on a green background showing Gentler Streak, Headway and The Way
9 unsung iOS and Android apps we couldn't live without in 2024
Adobe Fresco running on an iPad Air
Best drawing app of 2025: top tools for sketching on tablets and phones
DaVinci Resolve for iPad undergoing tests during our video editing app review process
Best video editing app of 2025: Top apps for Android, iPhone, and iPad
The Gentler Streak app running on an Apple Watch Series 10.
50 best Apple Watch apps: From health apps to games and everything in between
A hand holding a phone showing a photo of a musician being edited in the Photoshop for iPhone app
I'm a Photoshop pro – here are 5 things I love about the new iPhone app and 3 things I don’t
A person putting a MacBook Air M4 in a bag
Best productivity app for iPad of 2025
Latest in iPhone
Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max REVIEW
The latest batch of leaked iPhone 17 dummy units appear to show where glass meets metal on the new designs
Apple iPhone 16e REVIEW
The iPhone 16e’s 5G performance seemingly has the iPhone 16’s beat
Tim Cook
The EU wants Apple to open iOS to competitors and this is the mother of all bad ideas
Apple iPhone 16 Review
iPhone 18 series: the 5 biggest rumors so far, from camera upgrades to new display tech
Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 6
New rumors predict a foldable iPhone will launch next year – and cost almost twice as much as the iPhone 16 Pro Max
iPad mini 2021
Huawei might have beaten Apple to the folding phone finish line by creating a foldable 'iPad mini'
Latest in Best
Some of the best mobile controllers on a colorful background.
The best mobile controllers 2025: upgrade your portable play
Best controllers for Monster Hunter Wilds featuring Razer Wolverine V3 Pro
The best controllers for Monster Hunter Wilds: the gamepads most suited for the game’s tricky control scheme
Best password manager for families
Best password manager for families of 2025
A woman taking a selfie on a camel in Morocco.
Best eSIMs for Morocco for 2025
DJI Mic 2 with windshield
The best wireless mic for 2025: top wearable microphones for content creators
Lead image for TechRadar's guide to the best Fujifilm cameras, featuring the X-T5
Best Fujifilm camera 2025: top mirrorless and compact cameras, retro and otherwise