![]() This screenshot shows the various sub-categories within the Raw editing menu: B&W, White Balance, Exposure, HDR, Clarity, Dehaze, Color Editor and Vignetting. There’s also a dedicated Crop and Rotation toolset, as well as a dedicated area for creating and applying Capture One Styles, including those that come pre-installed and other Styles you’ve purchased through Capture One’s online store or via third-party creators. Image organization is similar to the approach taken by Lightroom Mobile, with options to view all of your images, only those imported last, or in albums that you can create to separate out your assignments and shoots.Įdit options include the usual array of basic Raw editing tools, including Exposure adjustments (Exposure, Contrast, Brightness, Saturation), HDR (Highlights, Shadows, Whites, Blacks), Clarity (Clarity, Structure), Dehaze, a color editor and Vignetting. I didn’t have any custom albums created at this time. ![]() This is what Capture One Mobile’s image library area looks like. ![]() Photos stored in Capture One Mobile are stored natively by default, but for users that also have a Capture One Pro subscription, you can also transfer images to the desktop version of Capture One via Cloud File Transfer. The release brings all of the features Capture One showed off in its earlier teaser and, although far from complete in terms of features, offers a solid baseline for photographers wanting a Lightroom alternative on iPadOS devices.Ĭapture One for iPad, like its desktop program, is a Raw photo converter and editor designed to bring the Capture One experience to a mobile device with a touch-first interface. ![]() Capture One has, finally, released Capture One Mobile, bringing its photo editing software to Apple’s iPadOS ecosystem for the first time. ![]()
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