![photolemur 2.2 review photolemur 2.2 review](https://feedmystartup.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/Screenshot-58.png)
Note the noise created by the bead-blasted finish on the MacBook Pro’s palm rest in the 100% correction. The second photo was taken with normal room lighting (all digital) of a broken part I had to return. In standalone, you can also add a group of photos and work through them, rather than having to hunt down each one individually. If you’re in the plug-in version, it will save to your camera roll. Now, there are sharing options for email, online storage, social media, other programs to move the photo to… It’s a whole new world! The initial version was pretty cut-and-dried – hit export, choose a filename and location, and your freshly Lemured photo is ready to go, and the program is ready to start on another. The finish of the process has changed as well. Note the details in the building to the right under the software’s effects, as well as the patterns in the sidewalk where the snow was drifting. Above, a night scene, just as it’s begun to snow. Here are a few representing varying levels of Lemur. No matter the finesse of the algorithm, the final judgment is always the viewer’s eyeballs.
#PHOTOLEMUR 2.2 REVIEW SKIN#
In spite of this, there are some photos that need to be “fixed” – the sky is wrong, or the grass is wrong or the skin tones are wrong or whatever.
#PHOTOLEMUR 2.2 REVIEW PLUS#
I have been using quite nice computational cameras for the last few years: an iPhone 6s Plus and recently an iPhone 8 Plus. For this next version, I decided to up the challenge. I ran a couple dozen photos through PhotoLemur during the first review, mainly from my back-catalog of early digital photos, and there were some really nice changes that were made to these images. Rather than the 100%, all the way to the right (which was the original version’s only setting), there is now an infinite slider where you can say “For this photo, I only need 40% Lemur, but for this other one, it needs maybe 70% Lemur.” (And, yes, I am officially verbifying a noun, and you can’t stop me! It’s the 21st century, and making up new words is a cottage industry these days.) There is a slider at the bottom where you can basically choose the amount of processing you want to use. When you click on this, you are able to view the entire altered photo. But in the right corner beside the “Export” button, there is a new button with a paintbrush.
![photolemur 2.2 review photolemur 2.2 review](https://thecheapsoftware.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/Photolemur-save-details.jpg)
The interface is almost identical: open an image, and you’ll see a partition with your original photo on the left, and the enhanced version on the right.