

- #ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID PATCH#
- #ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID FOR ANDROID#
- #ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID ANDROID#
Great Set of Tools - for a First Release - for a first release, I have to say the overall toolset is quite impressive.

Nice smooth transitions in and out if you want tools off screen. There’s a lot borrowed from how Lightroom’s interface works, but of course, it is all set up to work with your finger touching the screen. The interface is fairly intuitive as well. It was still very smooth, but perhaps a bit more herky jerky. Just to see how it might perform on an older tab, I ran my Prime in the super power saving mode which really reduces the processing chip’s juice. I also noticed that as you lay on effects, it can get a bit slower. Most layer effects ditto - in fact most operations are instantaneous and smooth with the exception of just a few of the more complex filters and effects. Other operations, like getting PS Touch to auto select backgrounds based on where you draw lines is instantaneous. At the Prime’s normal balanced setting, Photoshop Touch just flies - sure, some of the more complex filters and effects can pause the display as it thinks and redraws, but it never lasts more than a few seconds.
#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID ANDROID#
Very Smooth Operation - at least on my Android Tablet, which is a bit unfair because my tab is the Transformer Prime with 64gb internal storage, and the fastest chip inside of any current Android tablet - the Nvidia Tegra 3 Chip, a crazy quad core mobile chip with ridiculously low power draw. ) So I decided to buy it anyway and try it out - as soon as I said that on Twitter, I got a half dozen tweets from people asking me to share my thoughts on the program, so here it is: Before I bought the program, I asked (several times!) on Twitter if any of my photo friends had used it. My two primary tools for my photographic work are Lightroom (by far) and Photoshop desktop, and having a powerful app on my tablet was a natural draw. I was considering buying this program when it first launched for $15 in the Android Market because of the claims that it had a lot of photoshop built in for not much money.

#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID FOR ANDROID#
But Cut doesn't understand the scribbled Keep and Remove areas, and actually deletes the inverse of what you've selected.This is my review of Photoshop Touch for Android based on using it for only one day. Instead, they'll probably do what I did: choose Cut. For instance, after making selections with the Scribble Selection tool ( see my coverage of the tablet app), where you doodle over what to keep and what to delete, not everyone will know to then go to the selection menu and look for Extract. While most people familiar with image-editing tools and techniques will probably quickly pick up the app's operation, certain things might still elude you. There are only five topics with only the briefest of instruction, and nowhere does it tell you what each tool does. One of the most notable differences between the tablet interface and the phone interface - aside from the necessary rearrangement of the tools - is the switch to a less interactive and somewhat insufficient help system.

Some of the menus take up the entire display in landscape orientation. The app supports images up to 12 megapixels, and the number of layers you can create depends upon the image size: only three if you're maxed out on pixels, but increasing to as many as 16 layers as you shrink the resolution. But PT allows you to combine multiple photos with blend modes and complex selections along with all the essential retouching and correction capabilities. In fact, while Photoshop Touch's selection of effects is passable, it doesn't offer nearly the breadth or depth of filters that more dedicated apps offer. Keep in mind that this isn't a slap-a-filter-on-it or quick-retouch-and-upload app if that's all you need, then there are far better and cheaper choices. Sharing options tend to be governed by the API limitations of the operating system and the other apps you've got installed, so your mileage may vary there.
#ADOBE PHOTOSHOP TOUCH REVIEW ANDROID PATCH#
Output formats are JPEG or PNG, a flattened Photoshop PSD, or the native PS Touch PSDX format - this last format can be opened by Photoshop CS5.5 or CS6 as long as you've got the appropriate patch installed. You can shoot a photo directly into a layer. PT for Phone has the same robust set of editing and compositing features as the tablet version, including adjustments and filters warping, transforming, and adding text brushes selection and extraction tools cloning and layers and blending.
