![]() And you can create custom presets as well. There are also a bounty of presets divided into categories such as Black & White, Cinematic, Classic Films, Modern Films, Landscape, Vintage, Urban, Night, and all the presets from Pixelmator Pro. There are editing tools for just about everything you would want, including adjustments for tone, color, sharpening, vignette, healing, cropping, and machine learning auto correct. Just a few of the editing tools in Pixelmator. Not only is this fun and precise, it feels much more professional than using the Healing Tool with my finger. The first thing that I liked about the image editing tools was that I could use my Apple Pencil for everything. Once the batch has been run, you can save the images or share them with all of the usual options. The presets with three dots (.) allow you to customize them. You have a number of presets to choose from including machine learning enhance, cropping, visual presets, rotating, straightening, and file format. Choose the pictures that you want to batch process, then tap on Batch. Get started by tapping on Select on browsing mode. For many jobs, that's no longer the case. Batch processing is one of those things that we think we need a computer for, instead of being able to depend solely on a tablet. I decided to open an image from my iCloud Drive, edit it in Pixelmator, then export it to Photos. I know that sounds funny, but I'm not used to these sort of things on my iPad mini. Just tap on the 3 dots (.) in the upper right corner of Pixelmator and choose Export from the popup menu. Regardless of where the image came from, you can export it using a variety of options. This is more like the traditional: open a file > work on it > save it > and go back to browsing mode workflow. In Show Files mode, I can open any compatible image from my iCloud Drive, stored on the iPad itself (outside of the Photos library), or in Dropbox. Very nice.Īccessing iCloud Drive in Show Files mode. A long-press on the picture would show me the original - how it looked before both the Pixelmator and Photos edits. The image showed up as advertised in Photos, and if I wanted, I could continue working on it there using its adjustments such as Brilliance and Definition. The edits are fully non-destructable, so you can return to the original at any time.Īfter a number of tests, this system worked very well. Pixelmator will ask you if it can modify the image in your Photos library. Pick an image, work on it with Pixelmator's excellent tools, then click the Done button. Show Photos view that lets you access your entire Photos library. You control the view by tapping the "Show Files / Show Photos" link at the top of the interface. If you're already using Photos for iPadOS, the Show Photos view is a natural way to begin. Honestly, the workflow couldn't be easier. It's full featured, powerful, fast, and it integrates seamlessly with Photos for iPadOS and iCloud Drive. My recommendation is that you skip the trip to Starbucks this morning and spend your $4.99 on this app. ![]() Now, the bar has been raised again with Pixelmator Photo 1.1. First, the release of iPadOS with improved Photos and file management. IPad photographers are enjoying the best days ever.
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