


The editing features are divided into Basic Adjustments, which includes the app’s Tune Image, Crow & Straighten, and Details tools and Creative Adjustments, which includes various filters, frames, and special effects. Once you’ve got your photo in the app, you have access to all of Snapseed’s basic editing tools, filters, and more. It’s also possible to open a photo using the File-menu command and navigating to the desired image. To the right is a large space that instructs you to “Drag a photo here to get started.” You can drag and drop from the Finder or even straight from iPhoto. When you launch the app, you’ll find all of the editing tools in the tool bar to the left. Still, Snapseed on the desktop sports the same simple interface as its iOS version.
SNAPSEED MAC FOR PC FOR MAC
The Mac’s mouse-pointer-focused interface is considerably different from working on a touchscreen, and Nik Software has adjusted Snapseed for Mac accordingly.

The biggest difference between the new Snapseed for Mac ( Mac App Store link) and its iOS sibling is the use of image-editing sliders in the desktop version. What I discovered was a Mac app with features that are almost identical to those of its iOS counterpart, but with quite a few advantages thanks to the Mac platform. So when Nik Software announced Snapseed for Mac, I was eager to test it out. I’ve loved Nik Software’s Snapseed iOS photo-editing app since its release last year, and it’s clear that others shared the sentiment-Apple awarded Snapseed an iPad-app-of-the-year award for 2011.
