![]() ![]() Either way, that’s still rather impressive. I tried removing the parents in a screenshot of the picture used in Pixelmator’s Repair tool demo video to see if I could reproduce their results-removing the father was as simple as they showed, but removing the mother took about 4 tries before I got decent results. You can now change the size of the brush, along with its speed-vs-quality, and can get quite good results with it if you’re willing to tweak your brush and settings depending on the picture. Select the Repair tool, draw over the objects you want to remove, and it’ll automagically try to replace them with the picture’s background. Now, that gap with Photoshop (and other competitors like GIMP and Acorn) is closed, as today’s release of v3.2 brings 16-bit per channel support to all Macs.Īlong with that, you’ll find a much improved Repair tool in this update that is a much stronger rival to Photoshop’s Content Aware Fill. v3 brought Layer Styles and and liquify tools, while v3.1 added support for 16-bit per channel color-but that latter most-coveted feature for pro photographers was only available on the Mac Pro. ![]() Pixelmator wasn’t nearly as overdue for a new version as OmniFocus after all, v3 was just released 7 months ago, and a point release in January brought support for the Mac Pro and other improvements. It’s a big day for Mac app releases OmniFocus 2’s been announced for release today, and then Pixelmator 3.2. Pixelmator Inches Closer to Being a Complete Photoshop Replacement With v3.2 Pixelmator Inches Closer to Being a Complete Photoshop Replacement With v3.2 | Techinch tech, simplified. ![]()
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