Mac Software 3 - Photo
This is another installment detailing software I use
on the Mac. This post will revolve around software
used for processing, viewing, and printing photos.
iPhoto - $79, or free with your new Mac
iPhoto is part of Apple’s iLife products, which ship with all new Macs. iPhoto ’08 is the current release, with iPhoto ’09 coming out by the end of this month. iPhoto is used for photo management, and has limited photo editing capabilities. One of the newer features of iPhoto ’08 is the ability to group your photos by Event. iPhoto will try and group your photos together by the amount of time between each of the photos taken. For example: a couple weeks ago Paige and I went to the Aquarium in the morning, and the King Tut exhibit in the afternoon, after stopping off for lunch. If I were to load my photo for the day into iPhoto, it would see that all of my aquarium photos were taken over the coarse of a couple hours, without any large gap of time. It would then see that the photos I took while at the King Tut exhibit were taken a couple hours later, so this would be considered a different event. You can tell iPhoto the amount of gap in the preferences. The default is to group everything together by day, you can take this down to an 8 hour gap between photos, or a 2 hour gap, like I use.
iPhoto is great for basic photo management. It gives you one place to organize your photos, perform simple editing (cropping, red-eye, straightening), e-mail photos, design books and calendars, and also upload to your Mobile Me account, if you have one.
Aperture 2 - $199
Aperture is a step up from iPhoto and is useful if you take a lot of photos, and useful if you use an SLR, taking photos in a RAW format. Like iPhoto, Aperture isn’t made for complex photo editing, it’s more for managing massive libraries, tagging and searching, rating, and processing RAW photos. This is where I spend a majority of my time when I work on my photos, and this is the default application I have open when I attach my digital camera. This is similar to Adobe’s Lightroom application, but this one is made by Apple, and takes advantage of Core Graphics, which provides its speed in handling lots of images.
Pixelmator - $59
I have talked about Pixelmator before. I was part of the beta testing for this application, so I have been using it from the beginning. Pixelmator is a powerful image editor built specifically for Mac OS X. It has most of the features of Photoshop that I ever used, and costs a fraction of the price. The user interface is beautiful, and it takes advantage of Core Graphics to use the GPU to process photo edits in real time. What does this mean? In Photoshop, when you apply a blur, or some other effect, you will see a preview window, showing a small portion of your photo, letting you see what the effect will do. When you are satisfied you click OK and the effect is applied. In Pixelmator, the effect is applied in real time to the entire photo, letting you see instantly what is happening. It does this because it uses your graphics card (GPU) to process the effect, not your CPU. I think the newest version of Photoshop may do this now, but I am not certain. Unless you are just tied to Photoshop because you own a lot of plug-ins or you have used it forever and are just super comfortable with it, Pixelmator should more than meet your photo editing requirements.
LiveQuartz - Free
LiveQuartz is a free, simple photo retouching tool. It’s very powerful for performing composites, and also comes with a nice library of effects and filters you can apply to your images. All of this is done in a non-destructive manner, meaning the original photo is never tampered with.
FotoMagico - $49
FotoMagico is an application designed to make it easy to produce powerful photo presentations. While a lot of photo software comes with the ability to perform a simple slideshow, FotoMagico gives you the tools to create a great slideshow, with music and transitions, and you can target different screen resolutions, even hi-definition. My mother is still on dial-up, so it is hard for her to hop on the internet and look at all of the vacation photos I’ve taken. I used FotoMagico to create a slideshow of all of my photos, and I added music to set the mood, then I burned it to DVD and sent it to her. It was simple and it turned out great.
Photonic - $25
I started using Flickr a while back, right before Yahoo! purchased it. I like the simple interface, and I am a pro user, so for $20 a year I can host an unlimited amount of photos, and download them in their original size. Flickr is great until you have a lot of photos to upload, then you find the web interface to be a pain. While Flickr does provide you with an uploader, it’s very unstable and doesn’t work all that well. This is where Photonic comes in handy. With Photonic you can connect to your Flickr library and upload a large amount of photos. You can also add your tags and comments at the time of upload, and choose to create a new set, or add to an existing set. Photonic also acts a a client for Flickr. You can use it to look at photos on Flickr without having to open your web browser and go to the Flickr site.
Snapshot - $24.95
Well, we’ve looked at software for importing and managing your photos, for editing, for creating slideshows, and for uploading to the web. The other big thing to do with photos is print them. This is where Snapshot comes into play. Snapshot is like a photo lab for your Mac. You have full control over the print size, cropping, borders, etc. It allows you to crop your photos in a non-destructive manner, so you can crop a photo just for that printing, and it doesn’t affect the original photo. It also integrates with photo software like iPhoto, Aperture and Lightroom, so you can print photos from your libraries.
iPhoto - $79, or free with your new Mac
iPhoto is part of Apple’s iLife products, which ship with all new Macs. iPhoto ’08 is the current release, with iPhoto ’09 coming out by the end of this month. iPhoto is used for photo management, and has limited photo editing capabilities. One of the newer features of iPhoto ’08 is the ability to group your photos by Event. iPhoto will try and group your photos together by the amount of time between each of the photos taken. For example: a couple weeks ago Paige and I went to the Aquarium in the morning, and the King Tut exhibit in the afternoon, after stopping off for lunch. If I were to load my photo for the day into iPhoto, it would see that all of my aquarium photos were taken over the coarse of a couple hours, without any large gap of time. It would then see that the photos I took while at the King Tut exhibit were taken a couple hours later, so this would be considered a different event. You can tell iPhoto the amount of gap in the preferences. The default is to group everything together by day, you can take this down to an 8 hour gap between photos, or a 2 hour gap, like I use.
iPhoto is great for basic photo management. It gives you one place to organize your photos, perform simple editing (cropping, red-eye, straightening), e-mail photos, design books and calendars, and also upload to your Mobile Me account, if you have one.
Aperture 2 - $199
Aperture is a step up from iPhoto and is useful if you take a lot of photos, and useful if you use an SLR, taking photos in a RAW format. Like iPhoto, Aperture isn’t made for complex photo editing, it’s more for managing massive libraries, tagging and searching, rating, and processing RAW photos. This is where I spend a majority of my time when I work on my photos, and this is the default application I have open when I attach my digital camera. This is similar to Adobe’s Lightroom application, but this one is made by Apple, and takes advantage of Core Graphics, which provides its speed in handling lots of images.
Pixelmator - $59
I have talked about Pixelmator before. I was part of the beta testing for this application, so I have been using it from the beginning. Pixelmator is a powerful image editor built specifically for Mac OS X. It has most of the features of Photoshop that I ever used, and costs a fraction of the price. The user interface is beautiful, and it takes advantage of Core Graphics to use the GPU to process photo edits in real time. What does this mean? In Photoshop, when you apply a blur, or some other effect, you will see a preview window, showing a small portion of your photo, letting you see what the effect will do. When you are satisfied you click OK and the effect is applied. In Pixelmator, the effect is applied in real time to the entire photo, letting you see instantly what is happening. It does this because it uses your graphics card (GPU) to process the effect, not your CPU. I think the newest version of Photoshop may do this now, but I am not certain. Unless you are just tied to Photoshop because you own a lot of plug-ins or you have used it forever and are just super comfortable with it, Pixelmator should more than meet your photo editing requirements.
LiveQuartz - Free
LiveQuartz is a free, simple photo retouching tool. It’s very powerful for performing composites, and also comes with a nice library of effects and filters you can apply to your images. All of this is done in a non-destructive manner, meaning the original photo is never tampered with.
FotoMagico - $49
FotoMagico is an application designed to make it easy to produce powerful photo presentations. While a lot of photo software comes with the ability to perform a simple slideshow, FotoMagico gives you the tools to create a great slideshow, with music and transitions, and you can target different screen resolutions, even hi-definition. My mother is still on dial-up, so it is hard for her to hop on the internet and look at all of the vacation photos I’ve taken. I used FotoMagico to create a slideshow of all of my photos, and I added music to set the mood, then I burned it to DVD and sent it to her. It was simple and it turned out great.
Photonic - $25
I started using Flickr a while back, right before Yahoo! purchased it. I like the simple interface, and I am a pro user, so for $20 a year I can host an unlimited amount of photos, and download them in their original size. Flickr is great until you have a lot of photos to upload, then you find the web interface to be a pain. While Flickr does provide you with an uploader, it’s very unstable and doesn’t work all that well. This is where Photonic comes in handy. With Photonic you can connect to your Flickr library and upload a large amount of photos. You can also add your tags and comments at the time of upload, and choose to create a new set, or add to an existing set. Photonic also acts a a client for Flickr. You can use it to look at photos on Flickr without having to open your web browser and go to the Flickr site.
Snapshot - $24.95
Well, we’ve looked at software for importing and managing your photos, for editing, for creating slideshows, and for uploading to the web. The other big thing to do with photos is print them. This is where Snapshot comes into play. Snapshot is like a photo lab for your Mac. You have full control over the print size, cropping, borders, etc. It allows you to crop your photos in a non-destructive manner, so you can crop a photo just for that printing, and it doesn’t affect the original photo. It also integrates with photo software like iPhoto, Aperture and Lightroom, so you can print photos from your libraries.
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