

- CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD MANUAL
- CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD PRO
- CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD SOFTWARE
- CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD FREE
CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD MANUAL
You can then edit your photos in the new user interface, specially designed for iPad, using Styles (presets) or manual adjustments. You can swipe through your photos, and rate or tag them. You can simply plug your camera into your iPad, import your images and begin organizing and culling. It’s part of a larger ecosystem where you can organize, edit and export your images across multiple devices. It’s important to understand off the bat that Capture One for iPad is not intended to replace the desktop version of Capture One, but rather, it’s a companion.

CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD FREE
Capture One has also shared some details about what users can expect when the app launches later this month and in the coming months via free updates. Users will be able to have Capture One’s image processing engine on the go and use select image editing tools on their tablet.Ĭapture One has now announced that the new iPad app will be available from the App Store on June 28 for $4.99 per month. And further equipped with easy file transferring, you’ll be able to pick up where you left off on your creative process across devices.’Īt that time, Capture One said that being able to edit and export images on the go was a critical part of the iPad app.
CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD PRO
At that time, Capture One CEO, Rafael Orta, said, ‘Our plan, as we bring Capture One Live, Capture One for iPad, and Capture One for iPhone to the table alongside Capture One Pro for desktop, is to give photographers the most powerful ecosystem of creative and collaborative tools that give them the liberty of working anywhere in the world, anytime, and with anyone.

Since then, we’ve seen snippets and teases of the iPad app, including in March when Capture One shared its roadmap for 2022. I’m starting to think I will always prefer the mouse-and-keyboard paradigm.Capture One first announced an iPad version of its popular photo editor a year ago. If Apple announced a new version of iPadOS that somehow fixed all the issues I have with file management, window management, and other productivity features on an iPad, would I want to use an iPad? The problem is just that my human fingers are not as precise or fast as a dialled-in mouse or trackpad.
CAPTURE ONE ON IPAD SOFTWARE
But with software like this, the software won’t be the problem. My congratulations to the Capture One team for thinking out of the box and designing a UI that is specifically tailored for a touch interface.īut now I have a different question, unrelated to Capture One, but very much related to the iPad: For years, my assumption was that the software was holding back the iPad. I have a lot of questions still: how are photos synced? Where are they stored? How can I manage the synced photos and edits between machines? Does this work well for catalogs, or is it meant for sessions? Etc. So Capture One for iPad looks very impressive.

I watched as David danced around the iPad UI and couldn’t stop thinking about how much faster all these edits would be on my Macs. What that preview video confirmed for me is that I just don’t like working on iPads. It’s clearly early days - this is still a preview - but I’m more interested in editing with this on iPad than I am in editing with Lightroom CC. I’m impressed with the work they’ve done on the UI. That’s why I was curious about their recent Capture One for iPad preview. I find C1 takes me a little longer to work with, but I often prefer the results I can get with it - especially with regards to colour accuracy. Over the past four or five years, I’ve gone back and forth between Lightroom and Capture One many times with my photography work.
