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Pixelmator review
Pixelmator review








pixelmator review
  1. #Pixelmator review for mac
  2. #Pixelmator review free

If you want to see all of the details, take a look at tech specs of Pixelmator for Mac OS. The interface is simple enough and minimalist so it does not deter new comers, but hides enough functionality that experts in the design and photo fields can wield a great powerful weapon to tackle their work. It offers a pretty interface that follows the OS X guidelines with a dark mode that is very easy on the eye. In the realms of photo editors, Pixelmator is a perfect fit as a contender against the Photoshop of this world. As sad as it is for the old dog, I’ve never been let down by new comers with a strong new idea or a brave new way of thinking outside the box.

pixelmator review

But if you’re the kind of person who wants to go further, working on more extensive and creative photographic experiments and compositions on your iPhone, Pixelmator’s one of the biggest bargains around.I always root for the new thing, the underdog because so many times in the last decade I’ve been reviewing tech, I’ve seen great idea throw out established product or service out the door. However, even if you only make the odd edit and use the filters, you’ll find plenty of value here, despite the app being more expensive than many of its contemporaries. Its speed really is astonishing when you realize what the app’s doing as you pinch, zoom and tap.įor some people, Pixelmator’s undoubtedly going to be overkill. Performance-wise, even an iPhone 5s didn’t struggle during testing, and so we imagine the app flies on newer iPhone hardware. Only the smaller canvas of your iPhone makes it an inferior experience compared to using the app on an iPad.

pixelmator review

Given its toolset, Pixelmator is quite an involved app, but it rewards the time you spend with it, and it rarely frustrates. Some tools resemble what you’d expect from desktop apps. It would nonetheless be naïve (and entirely inaccurate) to argue this is ‘Photoshop for your iPhone’ - but it is enough of Photoshop for the tasks you’re likely to want to do when mobile, and with power, capabilities and a level of friendliness and usability that would have been unthinkable even just a few years ago. This expands Pixelmator beyond being a mere photo-retouching tool, potentially making it suitable for digital artists, and even for designers to jot down basic layout ideas on the move. You can also make and move selections, and insert text and shapes. Said layers can have effects applied, such as transparency and drop shadows. You get a range of tools for painting on, erasing, retouching and distorting the canvas, and layers can be used to work independently with individual elements. (They’re optionally available inside Photos, too, which is a nice touch.)īut it’s outside of the filters and effects that Pixelmator is most interesting. These aren’t single-tap effects either - most enable you to drag the focus point and range of the filter, thereby providing plenty of flexibility. If you just want to make basic adjustments to a photo, you can easily enough crop, muck about with levels, and then add filters. You start out with a blank canvas or one of your own photos, and can optionally utilize a Pixelmator template to add some default effects. Pixelmator’s filters are powerful and adjustableĪll of the tools from the iPad version are present and correct indeed, the interface is practically identical - just a bit smaller. How would it fare on a much smaller screen? How mad would you be driven working on complex edits while your fingers tied themselves in knots? The answers are, respectively, ‘surprisingly well’ and ‘not very’. However, what works on an iPad and an iPhone are very different things, hence why we were sceptical - if excited - on hearing Pixelmator was coming to iPhone. Instead, it was an immensely powerful image-editing tool with an interface specifically designed for touch. Although Adobe once brought a version of its powerful Photoshop tool to mobile (since removed from the App Store), it was Pixelmator that truly impressed, through not attempting to ape its desktop cousin.

#Pixelmator review free

The iPad has started to break free of this thinking, with standout apps such as writing tool Ulysses, synth masterpiece Korg Gadget, and also Pixelmator. Instead, they are devices for browsing web pages, noodling about on Facebook, and playing endless games of Candy Crush. An ongoing narrative about Apple’s iOS devices - despite plenty of evidence to the contrary - is that they are not for doing ‘real work’ (whatever that is).

pixelmator review

Perhaps the most remarkable thing about iPhone image editor Pixelmator is that it exists at all. Size: 98.7 MB (1 GB free space recommended for image storage) Hi! Thanks for reading. This post looks better in our award-winning app, Tips & Tricks for iPhone.įrom applying filters to working on creative and complex edits, this app’s a must for your iPhone










Pixelmator review