Add another name to the list of feature-rich freeware image editors: Photoscape. Although it eats and leaks about as much memory as Firefox, this editor is perfect for those who jump between JPEG and am-Pro DSLR work.
It supports RAW, as well as all other major image formats from JPEG and PNG to animated GIFs. It comes with predefined templates for users to create photo collages, fumetti, and Web comics, and has a standard set of red-eye removal, light / shadow, and contrast-editing features. A warning for processing RAW files: although it seems that you can drag and drop, the converter does not change RAW to JPEG, unless you load the RAW file from the native file browser. It's a small bug, but can lead you to believe that there is no RAW support. You can also batch edit images, combine, and print them one by one or more at a time.
The program loads fast and has an interface very different from those familiar with the main tools from Adobe. Users are greeted by the navigator complemented by a circular tabbed nav on the top of the screen. Most but not all important functions are accessible from either nav. It may take a while for people to get used to the unusual arrangement, but it's just unusual for a photo editor, otherwise it is intuitive, fast, and lacks only the most advanced editing features of image.
It supports RAW, as well as all other major image formats from JPEG and PNG to animated GIFs. It comes with predefined templates for users to create photo collages, fumetti, and Web comics, and has a standard set of red-eye removal, light / shadow, and contrast-editing features. A warning for processing RAW files: although it seems that you can drag and drop, the converter does not change RAW to JPEG, unless you load the RAW file from the native file browser. It's a small bug, but can lead you to believe that there is no RAW support. You can also batch edit images, combine, and print them one by one or more at a time.
The program loads fast and has an interface very different from those familiar with the main tools from Adobe. Users are greeted by the navigator complemented by a circular tabbed nav on the top of the screen. Most but not all important functions are accessible from either nav. It may take a while for people to get used to the unusual arrangement, but it's just unusual for a photo editor, otherwise it is intuitive, fast, and lacks only the most advanced editing features of image.
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