Snapseed Computer

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Rode Strawther

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Aug 3, 2024, 3:38:11 PM8/3/24
to vicoratill

Do you enjoy editing photos on your PC? If you would like to go to any length to edit quality photos, you should start using Snapseed on your computer. When you start as a photo editor, you like to cover all your basics. But over some time, it is about how you can get better with things. If you need photo filters, good functionality, and advanced features, there are very few options as good as Snapseed for Windows PC.

The first thing that we are going to discuss Snapseed for Windows PC is how you can download it for the system. Here are the steps that you should follow to go forward with the download process carefully:

It is packed with a bunch of exciting features. We are going to talk about its features one by one here so that you understand how useful it can be to download and install this application on your device:

These are only some of the features that we have talked about here. Snapseed for Windows PC is packed with many more benefits too. It is a fantastic photo editor that is going to serve you in the times to come. There are so many layers to this application.

Yes, it is completely safe to download and install this application on your PC. You need to install BlueStacks first and download and install Snapseed through Google Play Store on BlueStacks. If you follow these steps carefully, it will be 100% safe.

It is because it has plenty of quality features to offer to its users. To start with, you have over 29 intelligent tools to keep your artistic side fueled including HDR, brush, healing, perspective, and more. The platform supports JPG files, PNG, and RAW as well. You can tweak the photos as per your will without any restrictions.

Photo Stream, the photos you take with your iOS devices or import to your computers appear automatically on all of your devices. Up to 1,000 photos taken over the past 30 days are available in My Photo Stream.

Thanks for your comments. Actually at the moment I am doing my editing on my iPad using Snapseed and then transferring the edited photos to my Mac . I do not use iCloud, but it may be something to look into. I have tens of thousands of photos, and am not sure I really want to put them on iCloud, or how much it would cost me to upload that much data.?

Snapseed, developed by Google, is a popular photo editing app available for Android and iOS that gives a lot of bang for the buck, considering it's a free smartphone app. I love the software, but I wish it had some basic functions to make it my go-to editing app on mobile devices.

I've been using Snapseed for several years now and remember how pleased I was when they first brought out raw file support, because it meant I could import my DSLR images and edit them without the need to transfer photos to my computer. A few years later and my latest smartphone also now shoots raw, and it's great to edit with such flexibility. But there's still a few design hang-ups and odd idiosyncrasies that stop it from becoming the best smartphone editing app out there, at least for me.

When you first open an image in Snapseed, you'll spot three options on the bottom bar. Styles, Tools, and Export. Tools contain all the manually adjustable settings the app has to offer, and it's where I spend most of my time. Enter here, and you'll see my first bugbear of the app. The tools aren't listed alphabetically.

Stop! I can already hear you muttering at me, and yes, I know Lightroom doesn't do this either. It sounds weird to put everything in alphabetical order, because what if the tools you use most often are at the bottom of the list? I mean, that's why it's laid out like that, so the most commonly used tools are at the top, ready to go. But the thing is, they're not. How often do you add vignettes to photos? More commonly than applying a grungy filter, I bet, and yet it's all the way down the bottom of the list. Also, I've been using the app for so long that I know the names of the tools I want to apply but can't necessarily remember where they are on the screen, so I have to go hunting for them.

Okay, so alphabetizing doesn't appeal? Sure, I understand. Instead then, why not give us the option to reorder the tools? We could click and hold, then drag them into a different tile arrangement. Easy. I know it might take some time and money to program this, but hey, it's Google.

Seriously, go and have a look! We've got a vignette with inner and outer brightness controls (something that even Lightroom Classic doesn't do), a brush with exposure controls, and even the ability to edit each stack and selectively paint the scene wherever we want it, but there's no graduated filter.

I'd like to see Google take a leaf out of Adobe's book and give us the option of inverting our Selective tool (Adobe calls this the Radial tool). Instead of only affecting the inside of the circle, we could alter everything outside of it. And maybe give us the option to use the automatic mask function it uses by default. That is, if you drop the Selective tool pin on a patch of blue, it'll automatically mask your adjustments to other areas in that color/tone in the radius of your editing circle.

This one isn't as important for me, but I know it'd benefit plenty of users out there. Batch-processing in Snapseed currently consists of copying and pasting the edit stack onto each newly loaded photo or alternatively just pressing "Last edits" under the Styles tab. But loading up each new image and pasting the settings is tedious and frankly, something I thought we'd seen the last of a few years back. I can't give all the blame to Google here, because Adobe does it too. Use Lightroom CC (not Classic), and you'll have to do the same thing at the time of writing.

Although Snapseed lacks the features I've listed above, I still think it's a great editing app for smartphones. I mean, come on. I don't need a subscription, and I'm not required to make a one-off payment. It's completely free, so what's not to love? The fact that it's so robust, reliable, and does so many things well means it's still my favorite editing app on a mobile device. Yes, I have a subscription to Lightroom and have it installed on my phone, but I still only use Snapseed.

I just wish it added a few features to make things that much easier for me. Then, I'd probably seriously reconsider my subscription to Adobe. Perhaps then, it would persuade me to move towards a cheaper desktop alternative for the heavier processes, such as Affinity Photo. Who knows, maybe we'll see a legitimate desktop version of Snapseed in the future?

Despite the fact that it has color curves, it really needs an h/s/l control in the selection. Eventually a 3 wheel corrector would also be amazing. But adding that hue control in the selection tool would be an incredibly powerful and simple addition.

Reading all this.. I would say: Make it a proper desktop application to kick the bums of Adobe and others. Fiddling with images on mobile phone screens is just the wrong tool for it.Tablets might work, though.

That would be cool. You can actually install an android emulator on your desktop and run snapseed as a desktop application that way. I've done it as an experiment on a few photos - however it's still lacking features that would make it better than already available software.

I also like Snapseed as well. but the more fundamental problem with Snapseed is, Google is doing nothing about keeping it updated, refreshed, improved, up-to-date to offer some of these desired features mentijoned in the article. If Google doesn't bother to do anything for their Android app, don't ever expect them to suddenly come up with a desktop version of Snapseed, especially with Google Photo's existence. So, one either needs to be satisfied with Snapsee as it is or find alternatives.

In our review of Adobe's new Carousel service, we bragged we wanted to take bad pictures to edit them on the iPad, it was so much fun. But we also admitted that Carousel wasn't the way to go on the Desktop, where there are more powerful tools.

There are, of course, a lot of tools on the iPad. And we can't pretend to have any sense of their relative merit. We haven't tried many. But the rap is that they mostly do one or two things right. So you have to have a collection of them.

Fortunately some of our favorite desktop tools are migrating their way to iOS and Android devices. Other than Adobe, we were glad to see Nik Software bundle up its marvelous editing technology into a little app called Snapseed.

Over the years, we've praised Nik Software for its sharpening technology and its U Point technology while enjoying its library of preset effects for both color and black and white work. Our own preference is to fiddle with the image ourselves, rather than pick a preset, so we haven't written much about Color Efex Pro or Siler Efex Pro. And we just haven't gotten to HDR Efex Pro either, shuffling that off to an HDR project that has been delayed by camera reviews.

As editing software, it enjoys a remarkably simple framework. The company can add features just by releasing a new plug-in, which shows up as a filter. Filters are displayed on the left side of the screen in landscape mode or the bottom in portrait mode.

But they aren't hidden in some menu. They're just a collection of options for any photo you select in either your Photo Library (from either the Camera Roll or Photo Stream) or directly from the device's built-in camera. A button on the top left of the menu bar invites you to Open an Image. Another on the right offers Help, which includes a clever Overlay system (available for any filter too), online help, online videos, support contacts and more.

We're glad Snapseed doesn't use menus. A menu is hidden. A menu is work. Especially on a touch screen. But a collection of options is fun. You see some choices, you ask yourself what you want to do with this image and, well, you play.

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