A Better Workflow for Digital Photographers
Thursday, 3 September 2009
Achieve the most from digital photography and enhance digital pictures with SnapTouch.
A digital camera is only as good as the pictures it takes. Experienced photographers spend hours touching-up images to achieve the best visual results and preparing the pictures for printing. Digital photographers make countless choices deciding which camera and settings to use to take a picture
and what software and which tools to use to enhance the picture afterwards. At each post-processing step
the tools you use to enhance the picture affect the image
enhancing or degrading the result.
Regardless of your choice of photographic software
one thing is certain. The computer and image editing software are an essential part of the digital workflow. Computer-edited digital pictures appear in newspapers and glossy magazines
billboards and advertisements. If you have just one image
spending an hour in Adobe Photoshop to get the perfect print makes sense. If you take hundreds of images
however
taking care to enhance each individual image consumes so much time and effort that many prefer to forget the whole idea. But what if you had a proper tool to make your digital workflow simple
quick and effective?
SnapTouch (www.snaptouch.com) takes care of the entire digital workflow quickly and efficiently. SnapTouch takes care of every step after you take a picture from helping you transfer pictures from the camera into the computer to preparing already enhanced images for printing.
Transferring images from a digital camera might be easy
but SnapTouch also makes it smart. It can automatically sort pictures depending on the day they were shot
naming and placing them into folders accordingly. Specify your own transfer scenario
and your digital pictures will be sorted
named and placed depending on your very own criteria.
Correcting and enhancing images is the second step of your digital workflow. During this step
you compensate and correct gamma and exposure
adjust brightness and contrast
rotate and flip pictures
remove red-eye and resize your pictures for Web viewing or printing. SnapTouch is designed to handle jobs to enhance bunches of multiple images while maintaining the highest quality through the entire workflow.
The third step of your digital workflow depends on what you're planning to do with the image. If you're up to making a Web album or archiving images on a disk
use SnapTouch to stamp your pictures by imprinting the date they were shot
naming the pictures or embedding your signature. You can specify your own font and color for the stamp
making your digital pictures appear as works of art.
If you're going to print a multitude of images
consider the different aspect ratios of your digital pictures and the paper they will be printed on. The two common aspect ratios are 4:3 and 3:2. Why gamble on what will be cut out of your photographs in the printing lab when you can specify your own crop in no time? SnapTouch allows you to specify the aspect ratio of the paper you're printing on
and processes your images with a moving fixed-aspect frame. By specifying the frame position you are making crops showing your main subject without cutting out important features.
SnapTouch is a digital photographer's workhorse allowing you to process batches of hundreds of digital pictures in a straightforward workflow. Combining advanced features and unique automation with unprecedented ease of use
SnapTouch is a must-have tool for advanced amateurs and digital photo professionals.
Blog Archive
-
▼
2009
(28)
-
▼
September
(18)
- Access your Instant Messenger Chat History from An...
- About Norton Anti-Virus
- A Tale of Two Regeds Registry editors
- A Review of Medical Billing Software Products
- A Perfectly Clean Uninstall
- A new unique MultiCore AntiVirus AntiSpyware pro...
- A Guide To Free Screensavers
- A Guide To Computer Aided Design
- A guide of Outlook Express backup
- A Desk on Top
- A Computer Firewall is Your Primary Defense agains...
- A Better Workflow for Digital Photographers
- 9 Tips To Keep Windows XP Running Smooth
- 7 Top Tips for Microsoft Word Users
- 5 Tips For Buying Accounting Software
- 5 Quick Dirty Tips For Using Microsoft FrontPage...
- 5 Minute Guide to ERP
- 4 ways to make your Word file slim
-
▼
September
(18)