Use the Crop Tool to Improve Your Composition Scroll Through the Looks Panel and Test Out Different Options How to Edit Photos in Snapseed: Basic Edits.How to Edit in Snapseed: The Editing Interface.The end results are just so good.How to Edit in Snapseed: Table of Contents There will be an iPad version of Capture One Pro out later this year, but there’s a good chance that I might stick with RAW Power even though I’m a COP envangelist. But I also switched to iPad Pro as my primary platform five years ago, and by now use iPads exclusively both for work and leisure. I also wrote several books about Capture One Pro, which is my preferred Raw developer on Mac or PC. I switched from Lightroom to Raw Power full-time about a year ago, never looked back.īackground: I’m a photojournalist and shoot Raw only. RP is developed by a former head of Apple’s Aperture group, and while it also uses Apple’s Raw engine, it shows that the dude knows his way about how Apple deals with Raw files. If you’re serious about working with Raw files on an iPad, I’d suggest using Lightroom if you already subscribe to an Adobe plan, or – my choice – RAW Power. What it does basically amounts to using Apple’s Raw engine (which is included on iPadOS-level) with default values, and then lets you work with this default conversion. Snapseed works, but I find it rather cumbersome and the results of the Raw conversion not all that great.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |