I could die for a coffee
Modest attempt to capture the beauty
What once was, will be again(?)
Wake up before it's too late!
From an inspiration to the implementation
Boarding
Yours?
Sample A
Sample B
Sample C
Sing me a song little bird!
Souvenir
I Love Ireland
What is Easter really all about?
Cold spell
...
Third party
Breakthrough
Groups trying to communicate a message
Bring owls to Athens
Time flies!
The power of mental imagery
Amateur photographer having a day off
Harbinger
Sketch for a square photo sequence
Seen one evening at the cinema
Seen one day on the wall
Seen one day on the street
Blame inflation for the negative space!
Reconceptualization of a previously composed work
Skipper...
Walk over fence
Freedom of speech...
Holding on
"Shire" in winter
"Shire" in summer
Life is a series of coincidences
Collision of elements
Excavator
In the ideal world...
Step outside!
Bumblebee
Leprechaun
Invocation
Church on the hill...
See also...
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
663 visits
Spring stuck into the zinc pot


Here's some shameless spam.
I have used here Snapseed* photo application for post processing. I wondered how come such an incredible mobile phone photo editor can be a free ware. Then I found out it's part of the package Google bought from Nik Software, and made it free to all users. So, thank you Google!
It is the first really functional and useful mobile phone software for image processing. It keeps the EXIF untouched, it is easy to use, and full of great features. Used along with also free and now unlimited** Google Images cloud service, it provides an excellent tools to work with images online.
The only Snapseed's limitation is that it does not let adding text small enough (e.g. watermark signature). Text can be added on the image, but even the smallest font size is way too large.
*Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snapseed
**On Google Images settings choose lower quality. Then there is no limit for how many images you can store to the cloud. Image quality is still good enough for amateurs like me, who shoots 8MP JPEG images only.
I have used here Snapseed* photo application for post processing. I wondered how come such an incredible mobile phone photo editor can be a free ware. Then I found out it's part of the package Google bought from Nik Software, and made it free to all users. So, thank you Google!
It is the first really functional and useful mobile phone software for image processing. It keeps the EXIF untouched, it is easy to use, and full of great features. Used along with also free and now unlimited** Google Images cloud service, it provides an excellent tools to work with images online.
The only Snapseed's limitation is that it does not let adding text small enough (e.g. watermark signature). Text can be added on the image, but even the smallest font size is way too large.
*Source: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snapseed
**On Google Images settings choose lower quality. Then there is no limit for how many images you can store to the cloud. Image quality is still good enough for amateurs like me, who shoots 8MP JPEG images only.
aNNa schramm, Bergfex, Tanja - Loughcrew, Heidiho and 24 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2025
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Congrats on Explore.
It's a fine "toy" for mobile-snapshots.
Some interesting tools included, I missed for my Galaxy until now
(f.e.perspective - free correction)
Sign-in to write a comment.