Never miss the best light with Golden Hour Calculator, a simple free app for Android that helps you plan your outdoor shoot by telling you what the light conditions will be at any place, any time.
If you have all the panels open in Lightroom while browsing photos, so much changes on screen (and not all at once) that it can be extremely distracting. The easiest way to reduce that? Hide the panels!
In this episode of TWiP Apps, I welcome a very special guest and long time friend, Kirk Paulsen, from the company DxO. DxO has just released a major update to DxO Optics Pro, now at version 11, and in today’s show we’ll get a close-up look at what’s new and improved in this release.
In this episode of TWiP Apps, Borui Wang from Polarr Inc joins me to discuss their incredible photo editing app; Polarr. Today we’ll be looking at it on an iPhone, but not only does the app scale all the way up to the iPad Pro, Polarr also has a sister app on Mac OS X with near feature parity. Between the extensive editing tools, beautiful effects library, and innovative way to share presets, you’ll soon see why Polarr is leaving other photo editing apps… in the cold.
The X-Rite ColorChecker Passport is an industry standard tool for achieving color accuracy in your photos. It's remarkably easy to use, and as you're about to see, can make a tremendous difference in your photos.
The podcast I've been hinting at for a really, really long time is finally here! I have a new video podcast on the TWiP (This Week in Photo) network, called TWiP Apps. And it's available now!
I use the Library Filter in Lightroom to sift through and search for my photos. I use it a lot. Smart Collections, too. There is a behavior in Lightroom that drives me batty and it lands me on the black “No Photo Selected” screen.
Polarr is a comprehensive image editing app that works stand-alone or as an extension to OS X Photos. It's normally $19.99, but is a whopping 95% off for just a couple more days in honor of Earth Day. At 99¢, it's worth grabbing it “just because”!
There was an issue in Mylio, introduce in iOS 9.3, where portrait (vertical) oriented photos shot on an iPhone showed up distorted in Mylio for iOS. The fix is in, but you have to do something tricky to get your images as they should be.
I have just discovered External Editors for Photos in the App Store, allowing us to use any app as an “extension” for OS X Photos. This changes… everything.