Microsoft Picture Editor For Mac

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Paintbrush is a simple paint program for Mac OS X, reminiscent of Microsoft Paint and Apple’s own now-defunct MacPaint. It provides users with a means to make simple images quickly, something that has been noticeably absent from the Mac for years.
When Apple released the original Macintosh in 1984, they included two applications: MacWrite and MacPaint. Twenty-five years later, every Mac still includes a basic text editor in TextEdit, but a simple paint program is a thing of the past.

Free Text Editor For Mac


Enter Paintbrush.
Paintbrush can open and save to most major image formats, including BMP, PNG, JPEG, TIFF, and GIF. Full support for transparency is available for image formats that support an alpha channel (currently PNGs and GIFs). You can also paste images copied from many common Mac applications, including Microsoft Office and Apple iWork.
Last updated in April of 2019, Paintbrush 2 brings with it a multitude of new features, including (to name a few):
  • An updated and streamlined new UI
  • Transparent selection and marching ants for the selection tool
  • A completely rewritten Text tool for pinpoint-accurate insertion
  • Four all-new tools: Airbrush, Rounded Rectangle, Eyedropper, and Zoom
  • Image resizing, canvas resizing, and cropping
  • Countless bug fixes and speed improvements
And much, much more!
Disclaimer: Paintbrush is not intended to replace Adobe Photoshop or other high-end image editors. Instead, it aims to fill the need for a basic, streamlined, and Mac-native image editor. Whether you need to quickly crop a photo, add some text to an image, or just have fun doodling, Paintbrush has you covered. Sporting a simple and intuitive UI, Paintbrush will have you discovering your inner van Gogh in no time. Just pick a tool, pick a color, and go!
Oh, and did we mention that Paintbrush has always been, and will always be, completely free? (That’s both free as in gratis and free as in

Microsoft Photo Editor Para Mac

libre: the full source is distributed under an open-source license.)
Interested yet? What are you waiting for? Click here for a list of downloads.

Free Picture Editor For Macbook

Happy painting!
$0.00
  • Pros

    Fast. Simple, touch-friendly interface. Good photo browsing and searching features. Solid selection of image-correction tools. Automatically creates albums. Cool video editing effects.

  • Cons

    No star ratings or before-and-after view. Cannot tag faces. Does not support panorama stitching or selective focus.

  • Bottom Line

    With the addition of slick but simple video editing tools, the Microsoft Photos app becomes a respectable entry-level media-creation toolbox.

Microsoft Photos, the free photo viewer and editor included with Windows 10, gets a huge update with the Windows 10 Fall Creators Update. In addition to solid image editing and photo enhancements, it now offers video editing in a touch-friendly interface. Photos also now lets you mark up images with drawings, add background music and 3D effects to videos, and search more easily, thanks to automatic object tagging. Microsoft Photos is an excellent tool for working with digital images, one that could even replace higher-end photo software for some users. Note, however, that it still lacks such abilities as face tagging and a map view.

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Starting Up

The Photos app is included with Windows 10, and it replaces the Windows Photo Gallery app. You can no longer download the older app, which added panorama stitching, collage, and sharpening tools. If you've got Windows 10, you don't need to do anything to get the newer app. Like the Apple Photos app included with macOS, it's just there. If, by some chance, Photos isn't among your Windows 10 PC's apps, you can always get it from the Windows (app) Store.

Note that Windows still comes with Paint, which is more about one-at-a-time image resizing, drawing, and saving to different image formats. Starting with Windows 10 Creators Update, you also get Paint 3D, which offers easy 3D modeling, decoration, and sharing.

A Clear Interface

The interface for Photos is segmented into three main modes: Collection, Creations, and Folders. Collection organizes everything by date. Creations includes both automatically created albums, albums you create yourself, and video projects. Folders shows images by file location. From any mode, you can click on an individual photo for viewing and editing.

Photos is geared toward simplicity and touch. By contrast, Apple's Photos app for the Mac only supports the limited (though well-implemented) touch capabilities of the latest MacBooks' Touch Bar. In Microsoft's version, Zooming and un-zooming require a simple tap on the image or a spin of the mouse wheel. I wish, however, that there were a before-and-after viewing feature that you could use to revert back to the original during editing.

A big change in Microsoft Photos' interface is the use of horizontal sliders, instead of the circular dial controls used to adjust brightness and other options. The circular controls were innovative, but they did take some getting used to, whereas the sliders are completely familiar. Photos and its new sliders work fine on high-DPI displays like that of my 4K-resolution Asus Zen AiO Pro Z240IC all-in-one PC test machine.

Viewing and Organizing Photos

Any images and videos in your Photos user folder and its subfolders (including Screenshots) show up in the Photos app. You can add any other folders on your system to view their contents in the Folders section, as well as enabling viewing of OneDrive cloud folders. Including OneDrive means that any photos shot on smartphones set up with auto-upload appear in your Collection view. The Photos app also includes an Import option that works with any storage device you plug into the computer. It supports raw camera files—a plus for those who take digital photos seriously.

One organizational highlight is that Microsoft Photos creates albums for you automatically, based on date groupings, just as Apple Photos does with its Memories. The difference is that with the Windows app you can edit the albums to taste. Apple doesn't give you any input into which photos go in your Memories. Both Apple and Microsoft let you share your online galleries via links.

You can also create your own custom albums, and adding shots is a snap from within the album or from the Photo view. You get options to zoom, enhance, edit, and share individual photos as you work with them. You can also play a slideshow or draw on a photo. The drawing tool works with mouse, stylus, or finger, and the selection of tips and colors is decent. The eraser, however, is a bit blunt. It can only erase an entire stroke, rather than letting you touch up your drawing on a more granular pixel-by-pixel level.

The app is missing couple of the views I like to see in photo editing apps. For example, there's no Map view of all your geotagged photos—which includes most mobile photos. You can, however, see a map location on individual photos' File Info panels. This also reveals EXIF data and file dimensions. Photos also offers no way to rate photos with stars or apply keyword tags, though you can do both of those things in File Explorer.

Mac

Editing Photos

The app's Enhance tool is probably the first thing you want to try after hitting Edit. I find that it usually bumps up contrast and saturation, fixes white balance, and often does make for a better-looking image, if one that doesn't always reflect the drabness of reality. It's pretty good with skies and knocking back highlights for a better look at the clouds, and it does a good job correcting white balance on overly warm indoor shots, too. You can adjust the strength of the Enhance tool's effects with a slider.

Free picture editor for mac

There are also 15 more filter effects to play with, and the strength of each is adjustable, too. Included are four black-and-white options, with different levels of contrast and sharpness. Applying one of these and then scaling back its strength lets just a smidge of color into your black-and-white shot—it's an effective and interesting technique.

I am happy to see that the app lets you adjust not only exposure and contrast, but also highlights and shadows. Color editing is also an option, and I often use the Clarity slider (similar to that in Adobe Lightroom), which controls sharpness and black point.

Microsoft no longer offers selective-focus (also known as tilt-shift) or colorpop tools as it did in the previous incarnation of the app, and it doesn't offer the sort of noise and chromatic-aberration-reduction tools you get in Adobe Photoshop Elements. There are, however, simple and effective red-eye and blemish removal tools, and a vignette slider is available in the Adjust tools.

Once you've perfected your edits, you can either save a copy or overwrite the original. When just viewing, rather than editing an image, however, there's no option to save the picture as a different file type or to a different location.

Editing Video

Given all the clip joining, trimming, titles, effects, and background music capacities, the video editing features in Photos are extensive enough to merit a separate app. But Microsoft keeps things simple with a single media editor and saves you the hassle of launching a separate program. Plus, many people will use it to join still photos to create video slideshows, complete with Ken Burns motion effects.

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You get to the Photos app's video-editing features via the Create Menu, which offers three options: Video Remix, Video Projects, and Album. With the Remix choice, you simply select videos and photos and the app determines how to trim video clips adds effects and background music. You can edit everything it's done, or tap a big Remix button to see your content restyled. I appreciate that you can still use search when adding clips.

For hands-on video editing, you choose Video project from the Create menu; or you can select a few clips and photos and click Add to… and then New video from the top menu bar. Doing this also results in a precut video project. Clips appear in storyboard view, so you can drag and drop to reorder them. Trimming component clips is crystal clear, with markers to show in and out points, you can even slide a selection to get the same time length on a different stretch of your video.

Purists will cringe, but mobile videographers will be delighted that you can produce videos in portrait orientation as well as standard 16:9 or 4:3 landscape. Even savvy phone users sometimes forget to rotate their handsets when shooting clips. A less automated but still prefab way to produce your video is to use a theme to filters, text styles, and soundtracks. The filters come in 11 flavors from Sepia, to Loved. Unlike the photo filters, the intensity of themes isn't adjustable.

Text styles run the gamut from Classic to Electric and Boom. The last applies that nifty trick of using your video content as the filling of the letters. Other consumer video editing software like Adobe Premiere Elements and CyberLink PowerDirector only recently added this capability.

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Microsoft showed 3D video effects at its Build conference last May, but those differed from what's in the Fall Creators version of Photos. Instead of using 3D models you create in Paint 3D or get from remix3d.com (Microsoft's online 3D object sharing site), you can choose from 42 prefab effects ranging from balloons to explosions to butterflies. These are fun, and the ability to anchor them to moving objects (for motion tracking) is impressive.

Motion tracking is also an option when you draw on top of videos. You do this from the individual clip view rather than the video project view, however. You get a choice of a ballpoint pen, pencil, or calligraphy pen. For when you mess up, there's an eraser. For slideshows, there's a full assortment of zooming and panning combinations. In all, Photos's video-creation tools are simple yet effective, especially for those who want to create something enjoyable but have no interest in getting into the weeds of things like timeline tracks and keyframes.

Sharing and Output

Anything you do in Photos can be shared via the standard Windows 10 share icon at top right to any photo-accepting UWP app installed on your PC—Mail, Facebook, Messenger, WhatsApp, Twitter, and so on. For photos and albums, you can get a link and have the recipient view them online via OneDrive—no account needed. For videos, you get three options before sharing: S, M, and L. The first is lowest resolution, for sharing via email or to mobile screens. M is good for online, and L is for big screens. After rendering, you simply hit the up-arrow icon to send the current image to the destination of choice. The share panel has a new position in Windows 10 Creators Update—right in the center of the screen for maximum visibility, instead of off to the side as in earlier versions.

You can print your photos via the standard Windows 10 printing utility. There's no built-in photo printing service, though, and the Windows apps for Snapfish, PhotoAffections, and Walgreens didn't offer share targets at the time of testing. Some big services like Shutterfly, Winkflash, York, and RitzPix don't even offer apps. The situation contrasts markedly with Apple Photos on macOS, which offers photo, book, and poster printing right from within the app. Of course, a simple website visit can get your Windows photos printed with the services mentioned above. If you sync your photos to OneDrive, there are printing options from that service's Photos view.

A final sharing option is to send an album to Sway. This is an online Office component that lets you build a storytelling website. With it, you can add titles and captions with lots of design choices. It also lets you add tweets and file downloads from Facebook and OneDrive, along with custom embed code.

Simple Photo and Video Editing

For simple viewing, tuning up, and sharing of digital photos and videos, the free Microsoft Photos is an excellent option. After using photo and video-editing programs loaded down with menus and panels and features, it can be a joy to use one that's easy to use, clear, and has what you need for basic viewing and fixes. Of course, for really powerful photo organization, optimization, and effects, you need a full-featured application like one of our Editors' Choices, Photoshop Elements, Lightroom, or Photoshop CC. And if you really want to go to town with your videos, get CyberLink PowerDirector, our enthusiast Editors' Choice video editor, though it's far more complex. For most users, most of the time, Microsoft Photos is a solid choice for managing, editing, and sharing photos and videos.

Microsoft Photos (for Windows 10)

Bottom Line: With the addition of slick but simple video editing tools, the Microsoft Photos app becomes a respectable entry-level media-creation toolbox.

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