FlickStackr now Supports 500px.com

One of our favourite ways to access flickr on our mobile devices has to be the brilliant FlickStackr App and today saw an update to 1.9.5 which brings support for 500px, via an additional in-app purchase. You can check out our review of flickstackr here.

FlickStackr was designed to bring Flickr photo sharing to the iPad. Built from the ground up for the larger screen, it allows you to browse, upload and edit your photos metadata in the Flickr universe.
With FlickStackr 1.9.5 you can do a one time $ 0.99/€ 0.79 in-app purchase that enables photo access to 500px.

The 500px add-in allows you to browse and upload photos in the up-and-coming 500px universe.
“500px is a great place to discover high quality photographs”, says Carlos Mejia, amateur photographer and main developer at iPont software. “A lot of Flickr users are ‘migrating’ to 500px to find fresh content and have their photos appreciated by a new crowd”.

Keeping in line with the current photo trends, iPont decided to provided support for 500px for existing FlickStackr users. “If you love photography, you’ll love it on Flickr or 500px”, says Martha Levi, program manager at iPont.

“The app is designed to provide a seamless experience on both 500px and Flickr, highlighting the photo sharing experience, regardless of the source”, said Alex Greene, in-app icon designer and UI tester.
For new users, PhotoStackr for 500px, is also available.

It is a separate app targeted for people who are not familiar with FlickStackr. It has a lower entry price, of $ 0.99/€ 0.79, and is a very easy way to get familiar with 500px content.

Get it:

FlickStackr for Flickr – iPont

You can follow our photos on 500px here.

Once : A Photography Magazine for iPad

Once narratives move beyond images on a screen. By joining photos with text, audio, video, and infographics, Once offers readers a new and interactive type of story.

Stories are curated by editors, not algorithms, with topics ranging from aligator hunting in Louisiana bayous to water scarity issues in Bangladesh. Each issue is anchored by some of the best photographs being made today.

Once tells stories with a global voice tailor-made for a personal experience on the iPad.

THE STORY OF ONCE:

It started with the simple realization that photographs look better than ever on the iPad. Resistance to Twitter-sized attentions, and an overdose of single, not-so-great images steeled the idea that some new publication might be able to take hold in this fly-by-night era of publishing. (Life Magazine had a circulation of 8.5 million in the seventies.) With this in mind, Once Magazine imagines that the evolution of visual storytelling—with the introduction of a tactile reading and interactive infographics—could be headed in a truly new direction.

The product of the San Francisco-based team is a new magazine for the iPad that shares subscription revenue 50/50 with each issue’s contributors. Editors work closely with photographers, researchers, and writers to create compelling visual narratives not possible in print. The stories are not centered on a specific theme or location, but are chosen for their narrative appeal, journalistic insight, and photographic quality.

You can download a copy of the pilot issue here.

Album App comes to iPad

Dreamix Studio have introduced Album App 1.0, their brand new digital photo album solution for Apple’s iPad. Easily create extensive photo albums on your iPad. Scale, rotate and move photos with a single touch. Add pages to your album and get creative with the layout, or use one of the 30+ predefined layouts. Album App comes with 5 themes that contain a lot of backgrounds, borders and objects to fill your album. You can expand the app with new themes and buy them from the store.

Arnhem, Netherlands – Everyone knows the iPad works great with photos, but what if you want to show them as a full featured album to your family and friends? Dreamix Studio came up with the solution and created Album App, an app fully focused on creating digital photo albums on your iPad. No more waiting and paying a lot for printing services, or only full screen pictures and endless swiping to view all photos.

Album App lets you easily create extensive photo albums on your iPad. Scale, rotate and move photos with a single touch. Add pages to your album and get creative with the layout, or use one of the 30+ predefined layouts. With only a single tap you select a photo from your photo library and it will auto position on the spot you tapped on.

Album App comes with 5 themes that contain a lot of backgrounds, borders and objects to fill your album. Want more themes? Dreamix got you covered. You can expand the app with new themes and buy them from the store, which will be available very soon. You can preview your album when editing or save and view it trough the main menu. Scroll trough your albums with a swipe gesture and show it to your friends and family, import your pictures directly from Flickr & Facebook and much, much more. All this for just $3.99.

Album App will get more updates with several new features like airplay (view your albums on your TV) or print and reorder your pages. You can vote on your favourite feature or theme on the product website. Dreamix Studio has several updates in mind keep the App as the #1 digital tablet photo album platform.

Device Requirements:
* Compatible with iPad
* Requires iOS 4.2 or later
* 28.3 MB

Pricing and Availability:
Album App 1.0 is $3.99 USD (or equivalent amount in other currencies) and available worldwide exclusively through the App Store in the Photography category.

Purchase and Download: http://itunes.apple.com/app/id427769653

FX Photo Studio HD for iPad Updated

MacPhun have just released an update to their iPad photo editing application FX Photo Studio HD. The update includes more than 53 new effects, giving FX Photo Studio HD the largest variety of photo effects and filters of any app on the iTunes App Store.

Along with a myriad of new effects, the update adds a completely customizable interface that allows users to label their most often used effects as favorites, save combinations of effects into presets, and share images and presets via social channels like Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Flickr as well as email. Individual effects themselves can also be adjusted for deeper customization, and with a total of 181 photo effects and filters, endless possibilities now await iPad users and their cherished images.

The updated app offers an unlimited realm for creativity to blossom as users can go beyond classic effects and easily apply single or multiple effects to a single image.

The most notable innovation of FX Photo Studio HD is its ability to enable users to generate and share codes for customized presets as well as use codes provided by others, creating a crowd-sourced pool of unique iPhoneography art tools for users to tap into. Preset codes can be used in FX Photo Studio HD as well as in FX Photo Studio for iPhone and iPod touch.

Along with popular lomo and vintage affects, the app also features presets:

  • Art Effects
  • Pencil Paint
  • Burned Paper
  • Grunge
  • Cross Process
  • Glow
  • Blur
  • Vignette Layers
  • TiltShift
  • Color Fantasy and many more!

In this latest update, FX Photo Studio HD also makes available the option to save creations to the device’s photo album, clipboard, or document folder which makes sharing between a device and computer more convenient.

Along with new setting options, faster image processing, faster previews, and the ability to print custom masterpieces, this update of FX Photo Studio HD makes it one of the most efficient and powerful image editing apps on the market.

FX Photo Studio HD for iPad is available for $2,99 for a limited time ($4.99 normal price). on the iTunes App Store or at:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fx-photo-studio-hd/id369684558?mt=8

FX Photo Studio for iPhone and iPod touch is available for $1.99 on the iTunes App Store or at:
http://itunes.apple.com/us/app/fx-photo-studio/id312506856?mt=8

Photogene for iPad (Review)

Hi, I’m Jeroen de Kort, a 43 year old independent freelance photographer from the Netherlands. I’m married, have 3 wonderful daughters and besides my photography work I’m busy working for a boss in the IT business as a project manager. As a gadget lover I had to wait a while before the iPad was available over here but I bought it immediately when it was officially available.

One of the first things I did on the iPad was working with photos and exploring all possibilities. In the past few months I discovered lots and lots of photo apps, each concentrating on a specific task (enhancing, manipulating, decorating, mood creating, publishing).

Then Photogene came along, an app pretending to do everything … within iPad limits of course. In the end it always boils down to the fact that you’re working on an iPad and not on a Mac/PC, so that you can’t do everything is just a fact that you have to accept.

Let’s get started

Like most iPad apps downloading and installing Photogene is child splay. Just locate it in the AppStore, buy it for a few bucks, download it and in a moment or two you’re on the run.

Opening new apps is always a surprise to me and I’m mostly a little anxious what to expect. Photogene starts with a short timed small splash screen followed with the almost common question if the app may store your location. A little awkward at first but logical after a moment of thinking. Photogene stores your location in the image metadata, for what it’s worth, but may come in handy in some cases.

First things you’ll see are your photo albums in which you can navigate to the photo you wish to edit. It’s pretty intuitive and uses the iPhoto “events” and “faces” libraries. Since I don’t use iPhoto I can’t use the “faces” and the “events” libraries. I prefer using Lightroom and Photoshop on my Mac so … you gotta make choices and I choose this.

Only if I imported camera photos directly onto my iPad via the camera connection I can use the “events” library but that’s just an iPad gimmick and not specific to Photogene. Despite the lack of iPhoto usage, navigation is pretty easy and intuitive.

When navigating through your photos it’s possible to change the thumbnail size and select/export multiple photos. Export is also available when editing a single image and has enough (the most necessary) options. This shows that Photogene is a serious app for handling photos on the net or your own library.

You can manipulate your export size and export to the most common services like Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, Dropbox, your Photo Library and even FTP. Of course mailing a photo is available and to my surprise you can directly print a photo too (I assume via Airprint which sadly enough I don’t have such a device but I expect that this will function quite nicely). Enough options for me, although I realize that there always will be critics that want some more options. Finally Photogene provides help, FAQ and information constantly by tapping on the apps logo.

Interface

When you select a photo you’ll arrive in the editing interface. A clear and clean interface with no real hidden features. You get what you see and you see what you get, nice and easy. Double tapping and swiping with one or two fingers on/over your photo is common for the iPad photo app and is replicated by Photogene.

It feels familiar. I like to work in landscape mode but working in iPad portrait mode doesn’t lose you any options in the menu, they’re just positioned closer together.

The Interface

On top you’ll find some presets, common edit functions like undo/redo and a full revert to your original photo, the already mentioned export options and finally a possibility to view and edit metadata. Photogene is my first app in which I can see metadata and …. well …. when you’re used to work with Lightroom/Photoshop it’s quite a disappointment. You’ll see the color model, bit depth, DPI, file size, pixel height/width and …. ehh … nothing more.

I expect that Mobile Pond (the developer) will enhance this in the future because in this version the basic metadata is certainly not enough. As an enthusiast photographer I’m more interested in stuff like aperture and shuttertime values, lens type, etc.. On the other hand the IPTC possibilities are spot on. I can edit most common values I need and even store them as default settings or copy/paste them. Nice when you want to edit metadata for every photo you edit.

On the bottom menu you’ll find primary image manipulation options like cropping, rotating, adjusting, retouching, enhancing and possibilities to add some text. Pretty much the usual stuff you normally do in Lightroom/Photoshop.
All in all I think the user interface is a joy to work with.

It doesn’t have a high learning curve and if options are not clear enough Photogene will support you with small help texts which guide you through the process. On the other hand, when working with such an app it is to be expected that you know what you’re doing and you’re familiar with photo editing/retouching. But using it on the iPad makes it easier though.

Presets

To be honest, I’m not such a preset guy. I’m happy that there are presets but I don’t use them often. Why? I don’t know exactly, I just like to hassle around until I have the result I want to. Nevertheless, presets are wonderful for a quick result and can be very helpful when you have little time.

On top of the screen you find the presets button and this will open up a gallery of presets on the bottom. You can choose between several categories of presets and you can save your own.

Presets

Categories are: color, black & white, vintage and fun. All together IMHO not too much presets and not very spectacular. If you ask me I would load this app with lots of presets and spectacular quick results but now it seems more like a last minute addition with a few samples. It’s a pity because these libraries of presets could make or break an app. Another downside of these presets is that they can’t be stacked.

I can chose one preset, this will be used, and if I chose another one then it “restarts” and applies the newly chosen preset again. It would be nice if I could stack presets on top of each other creating all kinds of effects (like the popular “100 cameras in 1″ app).

Well …. maybe it’s a matter of time and maybe Mobile Pond will provide a few extra in each update. Would be a nice idea though.

Cropping

Cropping is very nicely done. Photogene understands what you need as a photographer. The crop area is scalable manually or with the use of some default ratios. It’s even possible to create your own ratio (only one) so in the end cropping to a specific format is easy.

Cropping

During crop area manipulation you’ll see the very handy “rule of thirds” matrix and the pixel dimensions which helps you determining the composition and size you wish. Other than making it more luxury (like opacity of the cropped area when cropping or other help matrices during crop) I don’t know what else I need for cropping.

Rotating

Rotate …. hmmm … I don’t know what to think of that. Normally I would expect that you can rotate the photo with two fingers …. wrong. An angle slider lets you rotate the photo clockwise or counter clockwise and when you’re finished it’s rotated and (strangely enough) cropped into a horizontal rectangular area.

Rotating

This rectangular area isn’t adjustable and I can’t move the image around to determine my own rotated crop. When trying this a few times and resetting the image each time the app stopped working and seem to be processing endlessly. Restarting the app again fixed it so I think it was just a little glitch.

Besides rotating with a slider there are also a few handy functions like rotating 90 degrees in each direction and flip the image horizontally or vertically. The smart guy who programmed the cropping functionality was also working shortly on this rotating thing because the very nice “rule of thirds” matrix was visible again. In the end i believe that this part could do some rework, it’s certainly not the most smart part of the app.

Adjusting

Adjusting your photo is well supported in Photogene. One of the most extensive implementations I’ve seen so far. Well known adjustment categories as color corrections, sharpen/denoise, histogram, RGB and curves are present with enough options to alter your photo to your needs.

I haven’t printed any photos adjusted with Photogene but on the iPad it looks very nice. And… since you probably won’t use the photo’s edited in Photogene for print this should be more than enough for iPad and web publishing.

Adjustments

The adjustment options look somewhat like the ones in Lightroom so they’re easy to work with. The adjustment numbers used with the sliders are not common, at least I can’t relate them to values normally used. For example the exposure can be changed from -0.50 to +0.50 and color temperature isn’t in degrees Kelvin.

This makes adjusting photos a thing of which you have to get used to. On the other hand, there are many options and variations possible so adjusting your photos is fun and there isn’t much I can think of you can’t do with it (for not to advanced editing of course).

And let’s be honest, every serious photographer won’t be post processing his photos using his iPad. It’s merely a quick help for when you’re on the go or want to show or publish some images somewhere on the net and then Photogene works very well. I think it will last a few iPad generations before we can use extensive processing power and can use grown up apps like Photoshop, Aperture or Lightroom.

Retouching

Retouching has a great potential, even when there are only a few options. The ones there are quite powerful, specially the “Heal/Clone” option. I just love to remove unwanted things from my photos to hide that I just stood in the wrong place while taking the picture or had no patience to wait while the unwanted object removed itself.

Retouching

Besides healing and cloning you can remove the famous red eyes and blur some parts of your photo. Just double tap on an area and Photogene adds an area in which you can apply the retouche. It’s nice that Photogene remembers the places where you did it so you can delete or change them later on if you’d like to. It has a similar approach like Lightroom does.

Retouching

In the end I would say that retouching is nicely implemented but I’m dying to get some more. I hope Mobile Ponds update strategy will include additional retouching options.

Adding text

Adding text to a photo has always a lot of discussion IMHO. Either you like it or you don’t. I think that presentation is very important and if text supports that, or make it more presentable, than adding text is very cool and can be very well done.

I admire people like Scott Kelby who can present a photo with some cool text very quickly and beautifully that even a not so cool shot looks very nice. I don’t mean he makes bad photos and present them beautifully, hell no, who am I to say that. I just think that, besides other cool things he does, his presentation skills are awesome.

Ok, back to Photogene.

In Photogene it’s not possible to recreate such presentation skills. Only text balloons are supported. You can play a bit with fill colors, border colors, text colors, fonts and alignment but in the end you just have a text balloon or a text area which you can position anywhere on your photo. It’s nice that Photogene supports the copyright (©) symbol to make it easy for people who want to display some copyright annotations.

Adding Text

I think that Mobile Pond should rethink their implementation of text. As serious as Photogene looks the unserious adding text is implemented. This section gives me the feeling that I like to hand over my iPad to my youngest daughter and ask her to pimp up my Photo with nice text balloons. Rather than adding some professional text myself.

Enhancing

The last category of photographic changes in Photogene is enhancements. With these tools you can add some vignette, blur, gray areas, frames, outlines, glows, reflections or apply a filter.

Lots of stuff to play with. For some of these tools you can change the radius on the go or apply it manually, which I like more because it’s more iPad-ish (it’s nice to apply changes with your fingertips). Don’t expect too much advanced features here but it’s very nicely done.

This last category shows to me what kind of app Photogene is. It has a lot of potential, lots of beautiful options and tools and works great. But …. There is a big “but”. In most situations you just don’t have enough options. There are only a few frames, only oval selections for the gray area (and only one area), only a few filters (and you can only apply one), etc.. It’s all very nice but you get the constant feeling of missing things (options, advance features, just more…more…more). There were occasions I thought this was a free app and the pro app would have more tools/content and more advanced options. Unfortunately this wasn’t.

Conclusion

Despite the fact that Photogene offers a lot of functionality and is easy to work with I do miss a very important and handy function: Layers! Every serious photo manipulation app just has to have the possibility of using layers. In my opinion a serious miss.

Presets may come in very handy but unfortunately there aren’t much default presets available. You can make your own presets though so don’t worry about the number of defaults, just make em yourself. Cropping is very easy and very well implemented, just what a photographer needs.

On the other hand, rotating a photo is possible, works fine but could be implemented much better … well … okay … you can’t win em all. Photogene hosts lots of adjusting options for color, contrast, histogram, curves, sharpening and even denoise. Pretty much the same kind of options you’ll find in Lightroom or some other of the big brother applications on a Mac/PC.

The sliding numbers are a bit unusual at first but when you get acquainted with them it’s fun to use. Retouching can be very powerful, Photogene has a few of them. Unfortunately only 3 retouching options are available (clone/heal, red eye removal and blur) which work quite nicely but … well … I just miss a few.

Adding text to your photos is possible but you’d be better of forgetting that option if you’re a serious photographer. On the other hand, if you want to pimp up your photos or make some comic images you’ve got enough options to do so. The last thing you can do with Photogene is enhancing your photos with frames, vignette, reflection, blurs and apply a filter.

In the end I think that Photogene is a wonderful app and has a lot of potential. It could have been much more because in mostly every category you get the feeling of missing something. It stimulates your hunger for updates and more options. I hope Mobile Pond will give in to that because if they do I think this will be the iPad Photoshop killer, if they don’t … well … then it’s just one of the many iPad photo manipulation apps out there. At this time I would rate it with a 7 out of 10.

Buy Photogene on the Apps Store

By: Jeroen de Kort
web:www.jdekort.com
twitter:jeroendekort

Tilt Shift Photos the iPhone (and iPad) way

I have always marveled at photos taken with a tilt shift lens but there is no way I could ever afford to own one. Alternatively there are a number of iPhone applications that will process your images to create (fake) tilt shift style images.

Tilt shift photography transforms images into almost toy like minaturisations. When done correctly the images are stunning and I am not sure any sort of post production processing is ever going to fully replace a dedicated lens.

During an Apple conference I had the opportunity to take a couple of photos from the thirteenth floor restaurant of a large hotel in Ireland. The image was perfect for some tilt shift processing so I decided to put two applications to the test.

Camera+(iPhone)

The first image (above) was taken this the Camera+ application. I realise this App isn’t currently available on the Apps store due to a software issue but I hope the problem is resolved soon as it really is a great application for this type of processing. I took the photo with the iPhone 4 camera in HDR mode and then imported it into Camera+. From here I applied the “Miniaturize” filter, saved the image and then re-imported to give the image the aged look. The blur is a little over processed you can see it better on the full sized image here.

TiltShiftGen (iPhone)

 

 

Next to the test was Tilt Shift Gen an application dedicated to the creation of tilt shift images. Tilt Shift Gen offers a number of processing options from circular filter or horizontal line through to enhancing the colour, contrast and brightness.

You can view both images full size over on flickr and I am not totally sure which I think works best. You can get TiltShiftGen from the iTunes Store here.

TiltShiftFocus

TiltShiftFocus is an iPad application so for this I email the photo taken on my iPhone in HDR mode to the iPad.

 

Creating tilt shift images on the iPad is definitely less of a challenge than on the iPhone due to the size of the screen. TiltShiftFocus costs £1.59 but offers a stack of controls that making the image easy with pretty quick rendering previews. Get it here. Tilt Shift Focus HD

TiltShiftGen (iPad)

Like Tilt Shift Focus working on the larger screen is definitely makes the TiltShiftGen app much easier to use. A series of sliders allows you to adjust blur size, contrast, brightness and saturation. TiltShiftGen definitely offers much more control over the image settings and the saturation adjustments really make a difference to the final image.

 

 

You can get the iPad version for £1.79 TiltShift Generator for iPad – Fake DSLR – Art & Mobile

I am struggling to decide which app I prefer. In a way Camera+ offers the least amount of control but the fact I can apply multiple filters makes it an interesting output. Which do you prefer ?

Links:

TiltShiftGen
Tilt Shift Focus HD
TiltShift Generator for iPad – Fake DSLR – Art & Mobile

Transform your Photos into iPad Backgrounds

You probably have seen dozens of websites offering iPhone and iPad backgrounds as downloads but why use someone else’s work when you can easily create custom iPad backgrounds in a matter of minutes.

The problem with using your photos on an iPad is the device can be used both landscape and portrait so the best background image size is actually square, as the background also rotates as you rotate the device.

Although Adobe Lightroom and Apple Aperture allow you to crop and export images at custom sizes I personally prefer to export images for the web or mobile devices in Photoshop to ensure the image is as compressed as possible.

Dimensions

In Photoshop create a canvas that is 1024 pixels wide by 1024 pixels. Now load your photograph and drag the image on to your newly created canvas.

 

Working to a square framework can be tricky as it can mean you lose important aspects of your image when it is cropped. This bokeh image was taken a local fairground and and sets the apps icons quite nicely.

You can now add the image to your iPad via iTunes sync or to keep things tidy I tend to email the image to myself and save it on the iPad. You can set a custom background on both the Lock Screen as well as the main background. I use the same image for both.

Download

If you like this background or would like a template to work from then you can download a copy here.

Please note this image is offered for personal use and should not be redistributed.