Google’s forgotten iPhone photo editor just got a huge update

Eight years after his last major overhaul, you might be forgiven to think that the photo retouching Snapseed has been abandoned by Google, but the new and improved Snapseed 3.0 has just landed in iOS applications, and it brings a freshly updated look as well as new filters with.
Although there are not a massive number of new features, the interface has received a significant overhaul, so it is an appropriate moment to reintroduce Snapseed and its capacities. If you want to make professional level photo changes on your phone, it could be exactly what you are looking for – and it’s completely free.
(At the time of writing the moment, there is not yet a word on Snapseed 3.0 for Android. But since it is Google we are talking about, it seems reasonably likely that a similar update will appear for Android devices in the near future.)
Present with Snapseed

When you open the Snapseed application for the first time, you will be asked to open an image for publishing. You are then in the reworked interface with three tabs: Glance (for filters at a blow), Favorite (for the editing tools you use most often), and Tools (For all the editing tools available).
If you go to Tools tab, you will see a Modify favorites Button – Use it to specify the tools you want to access the easiest access, from the cropping tool (which can cut parts of the image you do not want) to the healing tool (which allows you to clean imperfections.) There is also an automatic option on the Favorite Tab, which applies a set of determined algorithmically to try to make your photo the best.
At the top of the screen, there are tools to cancel (the rear arrow) and redo (the front arrow) your modifications, and to see all the modifications that you have applied so far (the two stacked squares). You can export your modified image at any time via the upward arrow button in the upper right corner.
Change the appearance of your images

THE Glance The tab may be the simplest way in Snapseed and everything it offers: you get a simple set of Instagram style filters, both in color and in black and white, which instantly change the feeling of an image. These presets can be applied with a tap, and there are no other settings to configure.
There are actually more filters on the Tools Tab, including Ancient,, MovieAnd Grunge. In this part of the application, they are called styles, and they are delivered with more customization options, such as the force of the effect or the way it is applied. Different styles are delivered with different options, so the Black and white The style effect allows you to modify the brightness and the contrast separately, for example.
While you continue to make changes to an image, you can actually make your own filters: go to the Glance Tab, then choose Add a look. This will save all the fundamental characteristics of the image (such as brightness, contrast and saturation) so that you can also apply them to other images. Scroll to the right and press Manage To delete or modify personalized looks.

On the Tools Tab there are dozens of tools with which to play, each with their own parameters. Faucet Adjust To start with the basics of brightness, contrast, reflections and shadows, for example, or Curves To take a more advanced control over these values. ToneIn the meantime, allows you to adjust different image tones separately.
Portrait is useful to add protruding facts to the images where only one face is the main subject, while Text Allows you to add some basic text effects: make your selection from the carousel at the bottom, then double the text itself to change the words and the letters. To use Executives To add a selection of different borders to your image.
For more precise changes, try the Brush Tool, which allows you to paint on a photo to modify exposure, temperature and other values. There is also the Selective The tool, which allows you to choose particular areas of your image, rather than adjust everything in the frame: brightness, contrast and saturation can be adjusted in this way, and there is a simple dial to modify the force of the effect each time.