Both can import RAW files (as well as JPEGs) from folders on your device (including the camera roll), but on Android, the RAW import is limited to DNG. For instance, the iOS version can use your phone's camera to create a new image, while the Android version can't do this.
While this is the kind of information that is well-documented in Snapseed's generally helpful tutorials, other key controls and gestures - such as pinching to resize the brushes - are not as clearly explained and are often discoverable only by talking with other users or by experimenting.īecause Snapseed is now owned by Google, we were surprised to find that the iOS version of the program is a peg above the Android version. Then swipe left or right to increase or decrease the intensity of that effect. For instance, in the Tone tool, swipe up or down to select from among Brightness, Contrast, Saturation, Ambience, Highlights, Shadows and Warmth. Snapseed uses gestures to make edits to photos. Our results with Face Pose were subtle and quite appealing. It also uses facial recognition, which allows you to independently adjust the person's pupils or smile. It works only on images with a single face, which it maps onto a 3D model.
More interesting is the new Face Pose tool, which can pan and tilt a portrait to create a slightly different pose, or correct focal length-type distortions.