![]() ![]() This offers the choice of taking a photo with the Android camera app or picking one from your Gallery (or other file browsers if you have any installed). Since you’re probably not interested in tweaking the included sample photo of dead trees, the first thing you’ll do is hit the camera button. Requires Android 4.0 or later Getting Started Flexible control of exposure, contrast, color and sharpness.Innovative “control-point”-based editing approach.The iOS app has a loyal following: we’ll see if the Android version deserves the same.Īlong with Snapseed’s arrival on Android, the iOS version also got a refresh, and in true Google style the app is now free for both platforms (it originally cost $4.99 in the Apple App Store). Photojournalist Dan Chung used the app extensively while photographing the 2012 Olympic Games in London with his iPhone for The Guardian. Snapseed’s iOS incarnation won Apple’s best iPad App of the Year award in 2011. ![]() This is good news for the Android app ecosystem, which is light on “serious” photo editors. When Google bought Nik Software, maker of the popular Snapseed photo editor for iOS, it wasn’t hard to predict that Android users would eventually get a taste of that app’s powerful image optimization tools. The app now brings its control points and filters to Android, with a new emphasis on Google’s favorite social network. Snapseed’s photo editing love isn’t just for iOS anymore.
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