Migliora le tue foto con effetti bellissimi!
Ripara l'esposizione, regola il contrast, rimuovi il rumore, metti a fuoco, ecc. Aggiungi testo dinamico e watermark alle foto. Lavora con gli algoritmi di riconoscimento facciale. Applica varie azioni, filtri ed effetti alle tue foto.
Caratteristiche:
Regola la luminosità, il contrasto e la saturazione
Regola la temperatura del colore e la tinta
Utilizza la regolazione automatica per correggere automaticamente il bilanciamento del bianco
Rimuovi il rumore che potrebbe risultate dalle scarse impostazioni ISO
Converti alla scala dei grigi utilizzando uno degli stili predefiniti pure crea ed utilizza il tuo stile della scala dei grigi
Converti nella tonalità Seppia
Correggi piccoli problemi di messa a fuoco con il filtro Sharpen
Applica effetti creativi come ammorbidisci e illumina per migliorare visivamente le tue foto
Salva i risultati in formato JPG, GIF, PNG, BMP, TIFF, o WMF!
Accedi alle funzioni di programma direttamente da Windows (disponibili attraverso l'integrazione del menu di contesto)
Interfaccia utente intuitiva
Velocità impressionanti
Elabora miglioria di immagini alla volta!
Nota bene: la licenza viene offerta per 3 anni.
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Commenti su Batch Image Enhancer Professional
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
Basically, you need to pay to upgrade to do anything useful with this software.
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Every photo I have is a unique, every photo editor I have can do all of those adjustments and more.
How do you tell this photo enhancer in a batch mode to re-adjust every photo with different settings, you can not, most of the photos will be ruined if one setup applied to all of the photos.
To me it would be useless, but for someone, may be beneficial.
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Gordon,
"Every photo I have is a unique ... most of the photos will be ruined if one setup applied to all of the photos."
Often people think of batch processing images as something that someone selling online would use preparing their product images, & while that is true, it's more common otherwise than many might think. Somewhat higher end apps like Lightroom or ON1 RAW etc. all let you save presets & easily apply those to many photos, whether you're going for a signature look for a series or enhancing photos from a single shoot. That doesn't mean processing has to stop there -- it might just get a lot of stuff efficiently out of the way, so that you can focus just on the individualized tweaks to make a good photo great.
Batch Image Enhancer Pro is more involved, with the ability to set conditions, action sequences etc. in a somewhat script-like format. I'm in the process of scanning thousands of old prints, focusing much more on just getting it done rather than making each one a masterpiece, and for that the more limited Photolemur works well, although I have had to process some badly faded batches separately in a more capable app. Engelmann has a couple of batch processing apps that have more features than Photolemur [though not as many as Batch Image Enhancer Pro], but getting the images through Photolemur is faster, which is why I use it. While many of the filters [actions] in Batch Image Enhancer Pro are gimmicky, it does have roughly a dozen that might work on with those faded photos, so I'm giving it a try, but I don't think it'll cause me to abandon processing RAW photos in Lightroom -> Photoshop.
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I find that photos often need different degrees of enhancement so I'm not so sure that batch enhancing will give particularly good results all round.
I will give it a miss.
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Does this got deblur feature?
Thank youi
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TK,
"Sharpen" is not the same as "deblur" and a good image processing program will treat each differently. "Deblur" applies to the overall image the same, and "sharpen" applies to edges differently than it does to the overall image.
You can find research online to learn more. Yao Wang, Ph.D. at Polytech Institute of New York has done some indepth study of the differences.
Even though the program may list "Sharpen" as a feature, it does not mean that it also does deblur. Most users may be satisfied with a sharpen feature, but when comparing the same image with both methods applied to two different resultant images, only then will the difference be apparent enough to realize that sharpen does not solve all images.
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