Image: Raymond Wong/Mashable We've been searching for a good black-and-white photo app for years, and, an iOS-only app, is a solid one that tries to emulate black and white film with filters. There are presets for film like the Kodak TRI-x 400, Fuji Neopan 400 and Ilford HPS, to name a few.
Instagram Photo Editor For Computer
The app is intuitive to use — swipe left and right to apply different B&W filters — and it lets you tweak shadows with a fade tool, control tones and contrast with a curves tool, and customize and apply vignettes. You will have to pay $0.99 to access these advanced editing features, though.
Microsoft out look for mac. Office 365 subscriptions purchased from the app will be charged to your iTunes account and will automatically renew within 24 hours prior to the end of the current subscription period, unless auto-renewal is disabled beforehand. To manage your subscriptions or to disable auto-renewal, after purchase, go to your iTunes account settings. A subscription cannot be cancelled during the active subscription period.
As far as Mac photo editing software goes, you should be able to find a basic editing program for under $100, typically starting for as little as $30. Paying more than $100 will often land you a professional editing program with additional editing tools and presets compared to the basic versions.
Image: Instagram () is hands-down the best app for creating time-lapses. The app's appeal isn't just that it lets you speed up and slow down video from 1x to 12x the normal speed, but its fantastic use of software image-stabilization is also a standout. In place of expensive gimbals and other hardware stabilizers, Hyperlapse uses data from your iPhone’s gyroscope to measure and remove frames that are shaky and create a video that's smooth. What you get is cinematic-like video that often looks like it’s been captured with more expensive gear. A photo posted by Christina Warren (@film_girl) on Mar 23, 2015 at 10:29am PDT Nobody likes to open up their Instagram feed and see a friend drop a dozen photos in a few minutes — chill out! — like the app's shutting down tomorrow. Instead of posting two pics of your food, a selfie and a pic of the restaurant you're in as four separate posts, consider consolidating them into a single post using a collaging app.
Instagram has a lovely collage app called Layout ( and ) that helps you create different photo layouts.