Iphoto ios
![iphoto ios iphoto ios](https://cdn.nerdschalk.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/translate-text-using-iphone-camera-on-ios-16.png)
I could use the buttons at the bottom to go to the next photo, the previous photo, go through them all. Any photo, um, and then we could also zoom in and out of the photo, as you would expect, normally. You can rotate it, you could flag or mark as a favorite. Which will apply a variety of effects, depending on what it thinks the photo needs. And of course at the bottom, you've got an auto enhance button there. And I could add a vignette so it's kind of, changes what area is affected. So, I can select a sixties look or saturated film, or chrome, all sorts of neat things.
![iphoto ios iphoto ios](https://i0.wp.com/9to5mac.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/6/2021/05/iOS-14.6-changes-and-features.jpg)
And I can select say, vintage here, and they're all at the bottom, and I can see, which one I wanna use. We can select and comes out in this little cool interface. But then you also have a variety of affects here. You can see I've taken away that desaturation. You can see it dramatically here when I undo the change. And as I continue to rub back and forth with my fingertip, I can see it desaturating the bottom there. And you can see it gradually desaturating the grass at the bottom of the screen, removing a lot of the green. So, for instance, if we wanted to, desaturate some things here, we select that tool and you can see select at the bottom, and I can rub my finger over, rubbing over the bottom part of the screen here. You can look at just the tools here and you can see there's a whole bunch of different ones, and we can select one and then paint with it.
![iphoto ios iphoto ios](https://myapps4pc.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/04/iphoto-large.jpg)
There's tons of stuff you can play with and including white balance here, which allows you to change the white balance from all sorts of different things. We have various tools here at the bottom that we can adjust as well. So it gives really good visual interface here at the bottom. Here I can drag the brightness control, adjust the visual contrast here at the bottom, highlights, and shadows. So, for instance, we can see this, the exposure tool here, and when we select it, we can see all the different things we can do with exposure tool. This gives you all of this information about everything you're going to see on the screen here. Now, when you wanna know the names of any of these tools, press the question mark button at the top of the screen. There's an undo button here at the top and we can use that to undo all of our changes. So, to move through them quickly, we've got your cropping tool here, which allows you not only to crop the photo, but also to rotate using the spinner here at the bottom. Turn it back on again, and we can go browse through the editing tools. I can turn that off and I'm just viewing the photo. Now, I've got the edit button in the upper right hand corner selected so all the controls on the bottom are for editing.
![iphoto ios iphoto ios](https://i0.wp.com/mobilanyheter.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/gsmarena_000282029-3.jpg)
I went to one of my albums here, and select the skyline photo here. So let's turn the iPad horizontal, for a better look. iPhoto doesn't replace the photos app, that's still there. So it appears you have everything that you can get using the default photos app. Once you get it, you can run it you have access to all of the photos, the stuff in your camera roll as well as any objects you've loaded. So the iPhoto app you get in the app store and costs five dollars currently. On today's episode, let's take a look at the new iPhoto for iOS. Video Transcript: Hi, this is Gary of MacMost Now. Check out MacMost Now 682: iPhoto for iOS at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.