Arw Photo Editor For Mac

Photos for OS X is designed to appeal to a broad audience, with simple editing tools that let anyone improve their photographs. But is that it? Even though it’s a 1.0 product (replacing iPhoto and Aperture), a lot of editing power is actually hidden beneath that user-friendly surface.

A new entrant into the world of RAW photo editors, Luminar has a unique way of handling photo editing. Mac App Store is a service mark of Apple Inc.

For example, when you edit a photo and click the Adjust button, you’re presented with sliders for improving light and color. Dragging a slider makes the image brighter or darker (Light), or more or less saturated (Color); you can also click the Auto button that appears when the mouse pointer moves over the tool. Clicking the down-facing arrow icon, however, exposes individual controls.

Arw Photo Editor For Mac

That’s just the beginning.

Jump into editing

To access the editing view, normally you click the Edit button when viewing an image, but there’s a better way: simply press the Return key. This shortcut also works in the Moments view when a photo is selected.

Shortcuts also go directly to specific tools, even if you’re not yet in the editing view. Press C to open the Crop tool, F for filters, A for the Adjust tool, R for the Retouch tool, and E for the Red-eye tool. While you’re editing, press the arrow keys to switch to the previous or next photo without leaving the editing view.

Raw

Best Raw Photo Editor For Mac

To compare your edits to the original version of the photo, press the M key for a quick before-and-after.

Choose which version to edit

If you shoot with your camera set to Raw+JPEG format (which records both a raw image and a high-resolution JPEG version), Photos treats the two separate images as one. However, the application defaults to editing the JPEG instead of the richer raw version.

To switch, open the photo in the editing view and choose Image > Use RAW as Original. (The option is disabled unless you’re in the editing view.)

Add more adjustments

The Light, Color, and Black & White adjustments in the Adjust tool are just the most common adjustments. Several more are available by clicking the Add menu (see image below). I find having the Histogram visible to be helpful, for example. If you use some controls regularly, such as White Balance, choose Save As Default at the bottom of the Add menu; those adjustments will appear every time you edit a photo.

Extend edit ranges

A funny thing happened one day when I accidentally pressed the Option key while editing a photo: The tick marks on several of the adjustment controls moved.

Many of the controls use a scale that ranges from –1.00 to +1.00, with the image’s original value sitting in the middle at zero. The Exposure control, for example, darkens the image significantly at –1.00, but doesn’t turn it black. When you hold Option, that range changes to between –2.00 and +2.00, letting you darken the photo even more (or go the other direction and brighten a dark photo).

This feature is also useful when you’re looking for more pop or an extreme treatment for a drab photo. In the images below, I’ve taken a photo of dried leaves and pushed the contrast to its initial maximum value of 1.00. With the Option key held, however, I can push that higher and get a more dramatic effect.

Multiple levels of Levels

The Histogram is good for identifying the color and tonal values in a photo, but it’s there just for reference. The Levels adjustment, however, lets you manipulate those values in some sophisticated ways. Choose Levels from the Add menu to view it.

Looking at a histogram, the left side represents dark values (with black at the far left) and the right side represents light values (with white at the far right). The colored areas within indicate the distribution of red, green, and blue (RGB) pixels within the scene. If you want to isolate and edit any of those channels, click the options menu that appears when you move your mouse cursor over the controls. You can also choose Luminance to view only the brightness values.

The teardrop-shaped handles at the bottom of the Levels histogram control (from left to right) the black point, midtones, and the white point. To brighten an image, for example, drag the white point to the left—the values to the right of the white point get pushed to their full luminance, increasing the overall brightness of the photo (see below).

Similarly, dragging the black point makes the image darker, and dragging the midtones lightens or darkens the values that fall between the light and dark extremes; the smaller handles that flank the midtones control affect shadows (left) and highlights (right). Sometimes, for instance, it may be better to adjust the midtones to brighten an image to avoid clipping, which is when pixels are pushed all the way to pure white or black.

There’s more to the Levels adjustment, however. The handles at the top of the Levels adjustment allow you to fine-tune the edits made with the bottom handles. In the image below, I’ve reduced the white point setting (by moving it to the right) so the lightest areas aren’t blown out, and then also dragged the top-center control to brighten the midtones. The result is a brighter, more saturated sky, but also detail in light areas such as the pyramid-topped building in the center of the skyline. You can also hold Option and drag a top handle to also move its connected bottom handle in unison, maintaining the relationship between the two.

Copy and paste adjustments

After you’ve edited a photo to your liking, you probably have similar shots taken at the same time that would benefit from those adjustments. Rather than try to replicate everything by hand, it’s much easier to copy the work you did on the first one and paste it onto another.

While you’re still in the editing view, choose Image > Copy Adjustments (or press Command-Shift-C). Next, switch to the unedited photo and choose Image > Paste Adjustments (or press Command-Shift-V). All the changes you made to the first apply to the second.

Looking ahead

These advanced or hidden editing features exist in the current 1.0.1 version of Photos for OS X, and there’s more to come. An update arriving with the upcoming OS X El Capitan will support editing extensions: third-party developers can create modules that will enable you to edit your images within Photos for OS X using the developer’s tools. This capability already exists on iOS—you can use the editing tools of Pixelmator or Camera Plus, to name just two examples, without leaving the Photos app on your iPhone or iPad.

For now, though, Photos for OS X turns out to be a much more capable photo editor than it first appears, which is a good place to start moving forward.

Note: When you purchase something after clicking links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. Read our affiliate link policy for more details.

RAW Viewer updated on June 28, 2019

Select the following components to download:


RAW Viewer (RWV-10)RAW Viewer (RWV-10)ManualManual
Related files:
Release Notes

RAW Viewer 3.3 Update

  • Support VENICE/CineAltaV V4.0 X-OCN format
  • Support VENICE/CineAltaV ACES IDT
  • Support EDL format File16/File32
  • Improved BIN functionality

RAW Viewer 3.2 Update

  • Support VENICE/CineAltaV V3.0 X-OCN format
  • Support X-OCN XT
  • Support Desqueeze ratio x1.25/x1.5/x1.8
  • Support DPX/OpenEXR viewing
  • Support Catalog PDF/CSV export
  • Improved Playlist and EDL functionality

RAW Viewer 3.1 Update

  • Support VEINCE/CineAltaV V2.0 X-OCN format
  • Support OpenEXR export with data compression
  • Support Playlist and EDL export feature

RAW Viewer 3.0 Update

  • Support for VENICE/CineAltaV RAW/X-OCN format
  • Support for aspect marker display or burn-in for export
  • Improved resize/crop function
  • Improved XAVC encode picture quality for HDR
  • Improved white balance adjustment behavior (Kelvin/Tint)
  • Improved user interface

RAW Viewer 2.3 Update

New Format Support
  • Added support for XAVC 4K Class 480 Decode/Encode
  • Added support for X-OCN files

HDR Support
  • Added support for importing HDR S-Log3/BT.2020 (F55/HDC-4300 XAVC) files
  • Added support for BT.2100
  • Added support for converting EOTF from S-Log3 to PQ, HLG and generate such LUT's
  • Added support for EOTF's on BVM-X300 (PQ and HLG Variable)
  • Added HDR Mode in WFM display

ACES Support
  • Updated ACES version 1.0.3 beta2

General improvement
  • Improved RAW de-bayer image quality
  • Improved Secondary monitor behavior
  • Added Vectorscope display

OS support
  • Windows 10 is now supported
  • Mac OS X El Capitan v10.11 is now supported

RAW Viewer 2.2.3 Update

  • Improved XAVC picture encode quality.

RAW Viewer 2.2.2 Update

  • Fixed several bugs that occur with the recent GPU/driver environment.

RAW Viewer 2.2.1 Update

  • Fixed a bug that prevented RAW files from previewing correctly when using the NVIDIA GeForce 340.52 drivers for Windows
  • Improved DPX/OpenEXR export performance

RAW Viewer 2.2 New Features

  • Export to XAVC
  • Export from XAVC and SStP
  • 2K/4K Monitor Output by Ultra Studio Series (Black Magic Design)

Free Photo Editor For Mac

RAW Viewer 2.1.1 Update

Bug fix only: fixes a display error in the Tone Curve Editor when selecting SLog-2, SLog-3 and Aces Log.

RAW Viewer 2.1 New Features

Photo Editor Mac Os

  • Support New OS (Mac OS X 10.9 (Mavericks) and Windows8.1)
  • Selectable new Color Space and Tone Curve (S-Log3, S-Gamut3 and S-Gamut3.Cine)
  • XAVC Viewing and Look Control
  • SStP Viewing and Look Control
  • Trim XAVC and SStP
  • Generate F55/F5 User LUT
  • Support Tangent Wave and Element Kb and Mf (already support Element Tk from V2.0)
  • Viewer full screen mode (double-click on Viewer)
  • Display Playing FPS Performance
  • Export Cooke Lens metadata as .csv file
  • Input Reel Metadata in ProRes exporting
  • Selectable delimiter in DPX and Open EXR exporting