Snapseed App Mac Os X

07.09.2020by

Snapseed for MAC – Download Latest version (2.19.0.201907232) of Snapseed for MAC PC and iOS/iPad directly from official site for free now.

  1. App Snapseed

Download Snapseed for MAC

Mar 04, 2019  If you are a Mac user who wants to use Snapseed on Macbook or Macbook Pro, you’ve come to the right place! We’ll be outlining easy ways to Download and Use Snapseed for Mac. If you are even a tad bit aware of the photography world or are perhaps a professional photographer, you must be familiar with the Snapseed app. Owned by Google, this free app is compact and extremely powerful. Download Snapseed for PC/Mac/Windows 7,8,10 and have the fun experience of using the smartphone Apps on Desktop or personal computers. Description and Features of Snapseed For PC: New and rising Photography App, Snapseed developed by Google LLC for Android is available for free in the Play Store. Before we move toward the installation guide of Snapseed on PC using Emulators, here is the.

File Name: Snapseed

App Version: 2.19.0.201907232

Update: 2018-06-29

How To Install Snapseed on MAC OSX

To install Snapseed 2020 For MAC, you will need to install an Android Emulator like Bluestacks or Nox App Player first. With this android emulator app you will be able to Download Snapseed full version on your MAC PC and iOS/iPAD.

  1. First, Go to this page to Download Bluestacks for MAC.
  2. Or Go to this page to Download Nox App Player for MAC
  3. Then, download and follow the instruction to Install Android Emulator for MAC.
  4. Click the icon to run the Android Emulator app on MAC.
  5. After bluestacks started, please login with your Google Play Store account.
  6. Then, open Google Play Store and search for ” Snapseed “
  7. Choose one of the app from the search result list. Click the Install button.
  8. Or import the .apk file that you’ve downloaded from the link on above this article with Bluestacks/NoxAppPlayer File Explorer.
  9. For the last step, Right-Click then install it.
  10. Finished. Now you can play Snapseed on MAC PC.
  11. Enjoy the app!

Snapseed for MAC Features and Description

Snapseed App Preview

Snapseed is a complete and professional photo editor developed by Google.

KEY FEATURES

• 29 Tools and Filters, including: Healing, Brush, Structure, HDR, Perspective (see list below)

• Opens JPG and RAW files

• Save your personal looks and apply them to new photos later

• Selective filter brush

• All styles can be tweaked with fine, precise control

TOOLS, FILTERS AND FACE

• RAW Develop – open and tweak RAW DNG files; save non-destructively or export as JPG

• Tune image – adjust exposure and color automatically or manually with fine, precise control

• Details – magically brings out surface structures in images

• Crop – crop to standard sizes or freely

• Rotate – rotate by 90°, or straighten a skewed horizon

• Perspective – fix skewed lines and perfect the geometry of horizons or buildings

• White Balance – adjust the colors so that the image looks more natural

• Brush – selectively retouch exposure, saturation, brightness or warmth

• Selective – the renown “Control Point” technology: Position up to 8 points on the image and assign enhancements, the algorithm does the rest magically

• Healing – remove the uninvited neighbor from a group picture

• Vignette – add a soft darkness around the corners like a beautiful, wide-aperture would do

• Text – add both stylized or plain text

Snapseed download mac

• Curves – have precise control over the brightness levels in your photos

• Expand – increase the size of your canvas and fill up the new space in smart ways with content of your image

• Lens Blur – add a beautiful Bokeh to images (background softening), ideal for photographic portraits

• Glamour Glow – add a fine glow to images, great for fashion or portraits

• Tonal Contrast – boost details selectively in the shadows, midtones and highlights

• HDR Scape – bring a stunning look to your images by creating the effect of multiple exposures

• Drama – add a hint of doomsday to your images (6 styles)

• Grunge – an edgy look with strong styles and texture overlays

• Grainy Film – get modern film looks with realistic grain

• Vintage – the style of color film photo from the 50’s, 60’s or 70’s

• Retrolux – go retro with light leaks, scratches, film styles

• Noir – Black and White film looks with realistic grain and the “wash” effect

• Black & White – classic Black and White look straight out of the darkroom

• Frames – add frames with adjustable size

• Double Exposure – blend two photos, choosing from blend modes that are inspired by shooting on film and by digital image processing

• Face Enhance – add focus to the eyes, add face-specific lighting, or smoothen skin

• Face Pose – correct the pose of portraits based on three dimensional models
• Added support for a dark theme mode in Settings

• Bug fixes

If it comes from any other source, it's unsafe. All YouTube 'downloaders' are in this category, though not all are necessarily harmful. Software with a corporate brand, such as Adobe Flash Player, must be downloaded directly from the developer’s website. Do you need security software for mac.

Disclaimer
The contents and apk files on this site is collected and process from Google Play. We are not responsible with abusing all of the applications on this site.

Snapseed is an App that build by their Developer. This website is not directly affiliated with them. All trademarks, registered trademarks, product names and company names or logos mentioned it in here is the property of their respective owners.

All Macintosh application is not hosted on our server. When visitor click “Download” button, installation files will downloading directly from the Official Site.

By Chris Maxcer MacNewsWorld ECT News Network
Jan 16, 2012 5:00 AM PT


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Snapseed, an app from Nik Software, is available for US$19.99 at the Mac App Store.

The app that won Apple's coveted iPad App of the Year award, Snapseed by Nik Software, has made it to the Mac App Store and therefore, Mac OS X. Not only is this cool for photography-loving Mac users, it's cool because it brings some awesome filter and editing effects to the masses.

As near as I can tell, Nik Software has been around since 1995 and has pretty much focused on photo pros or prosumer sorts of customers -- I never heard of them until Snapseed hit the Apple App Store.

Fast forward to 2012, and Snapseed has me rethinking how I handle my photos.

What Is Snapseed?

Snapseed is basically a photo enhancement app that uses preset imaging filters to let you apply effects to a photo in real time. You can change the focus, make a photo look old, add a nifty border, and apply many of the standard editing effects you can find in everything from iPhoto to Photoshop -- like changing the brightness, contrast, saturation, adding light to shadows, cropping, etc.

Snapseed is not a storage and manipulation app like iPhoto, nor is it a full editing app like Photoshop or Pixelmator. It's all about applying filters to create a new look in a photo.

How Does It Work?

Easy enough: Like some newer photo-editing sorts of apps, all you have to do is drag and drop a photo onto the open Snapseed app to get rolling. You can use old-school menu navigation, too, though. I was a bit worried that I would have to use the Mac's menu/finder system to find photos to edit that are buried deep in my massive iPhoto library, but luckily you can also drag and drop a photo from iPhoto into Snapseed to edit it. (Once you edit it, though, you'll have to save it then import it back into iPhoto if that's where you want it. I like it this way since I don't want to mess with the originals in my iPhoto library.)

Once your photo is selected, you have a set of icons at the left that provide the types of adjustments and effects you can make. These icons look terrible, by the way, almost as if they are product images for separate filters or box covers for retail sale with a tiny little barcode at the top right. I don't know where these came from or why there is indecipherable text across the top of the icons, but I sure as heck hope Nik Software makes an update to Snapseed that cleans up these icons. In the meantime, you'll just have to ignore the stumble of these icons and focus on the effects.

The top set of icons (lets call them controls) give you basic adjustments. 'Tune Image' gives you basic automatic enhancements or you can make it darker, lighter or moody. (Seriously, 'Moody' is one of the settings.)

Crop & Straighten lets you crop and straighten the image, and Details lets you sharpen the photo. Don't ignore this effect. 'Structure' somehow adds a bit of magic to sharpen and enhance some photos in ways I don't understand.. yet it works.

Creative Adjustments

Beyond the basics, Snapseed not only gives you additional effects like Black & White, it takes these effects to new levels of refinement and ease of application. You can turn a photo black and white, then add more grain to it to make it look older. Or apply a color filter (yes, to black and white) which will give the photo a whole new look.

All I can say is to step through the color filters of your black and white photos before you save them -- they can change the feel of the photo in surprising ways. If I were a professional photographer, I'm sure I would know what's going on here, but since I'm a shutter-snapping regular guy, I just see the effects.. and like them.

My current favorite effect is Center Focus with an 'Old Lens.' For some reason, this effect lets you blur out the edges of your photo to make the center really grab your attention. Of course, you can easily modify the amount of blur or even the location of the 'center' to change where the focus of the photo is located.

The Drama effect is cool. On landscape photos of rocks and mountains, you can brighten the shot or make it darker. The 'Dark 2' effect can be downright creepy -- it somehow turned bright and airy photos of rock outcroppings into ominous shards of granite that could easily have come out of the 'Lord of the Rings' movies.

Other effects like Frames do what you might expect -- add really cool border options to your photos. Grunge will make your digital photos look like old print photos that have been used and abused, while Vintage just makes them look like print photos that were taken with older cameras and have since aged.

Tilt-Shift can give you the uncanny ability to make a photo appear surreal and miniaturized.. but the effect seems best suited to things like cities and cars. I've been frantically looking for an old shot I took of a marina that has some awesome boats and the sea, but I haven't found it yet. When I do, I'll apply this filter straightaway.

Snapseed Is Abnormal

There's something going on with Snapseed; the app is surprisingly engaging, and it's not due to its controls or design -- even though the controls are generally intuitive. No, there's something more, and it took me 24 hours to figure it out.

Snapseed has the uncanny ability to evoke emotion in your photos.

I don't know how to explain it any better than that. To understand it, apply some filters and then click the button that lets you instantly toggle from the original photo to the filtered photo.. and you'll see what I mean.

At $19.99 in the Mac App Store, Snapseed is priced a bit more than an impulse purchase for most consumers, but for me, it's been well worth it. I'm glad I made the leap. In fact, Snapseed has already entered rarified air for me: Snapseed encourages you to think about photos differently, and if you're lucky, you might even start taking and framing new photos with Snapseed's effects in mind. I've already started casting my mind into the future, camera in hand, ready to try new shots for Snapseed. I can't think of any greater praise than that.

App Snapseed

MacNewsWorld columnist Chris Maxcer has been writing about the tech industry since the birth of the email newsletter, and he still remembers the clacking Mac keyboards from high school -- Apple's seed-planting strategy at work. While he enjoys elegant gear and sublime tech, there's something to be said for turning it all off -- or most of it -- to go outside. To catch him, take a 'firstnamelastname' guess at Gmail.com.

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