Mac|Life

Polarr Photo Editor Pro

Image editor destined for great things

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Free (IAPs) From Polarr, polarr.co Needs Mac OS X 10.10 or later

Photo editing apps are so common on the App Store and internet that an extra problem has been added to that of making a good app in the first place — standing out. Polarr has a lovely dark interface, with the tools spread around its edges, and a vast number of features – but you might not get to try them all.

Polarr’s developers have chosen to follow Adobe into the world of subscripti­on software. They are quite open about why they’ve done it – there’s a long page on their website dedicated to an explanatio­n, and it boils down to continued developmen­t and improvemen­t. You can download the app for free, but spending $24 a year gets you a lot more features to play with. As a free app, the ability to alter detail levels, crop, dehaze, fix lens distortion, retouch skin and add basic filters is almost worth it as at least you get to do it from within the app’s clean interface, one which puts the focus on the image you’re editing rather than the floating windows and palettes surroundin­g it.

Buying a sub gets you a lot more in the way of masking, noise reduction, additional filters, layer blending, the ability to use Polarr as a Photos extension and compatibil­ity with dual-camera iPhones’ portrait modes (including depth masking, which is very clever). There’s a lot there, and if Polarr’s way of doing things works for you it’s well worth the money – there’s a free trial available for you to find out. A Pro account also unlocks cross-platform access, so you’ve got the same app on Mac, iOS and other operating systems, with up to five users.

It’s an app that really benefits from a larger screen, so that Overlays – secondary images laid over the original – can be faded away, brushed out and otherwise manipulate­d to create wonderful new skies, weather conditions or even double exposures. Layer masks make it easy to blur the background of an image so it looks as if it was taken on a DSLR (or an iPhone X), while gradient masks allow you to edit the sky in an image without affecting the foreground.

This kind of middle-ground image editor, that’s more than Photos but less than Photoshop, is such a hotly contested sector of the App Store it can be hard to know what’s best without trying them all. Polarr’s developers are definitely heading in the right direction, as the app allows a great many artistic edits and, with its tips and tutorials, teaches you how to use them. It can be a little intimidati­ng at first, but time spent with it will be repaid in glorious images.

the bottom line. Polarr is an interestin­g addition to the ranks of image editing apps. Ian Evenden

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