Which photograhic restoration/repair software is the best value?
On the internet, I have found a large number of photo restoration / repair software programs, but I dont know which is best / easiest to use with Microsoft Windows XP. Of the following, which would be best, especially for a Forrest Gump type of person.
1) Adobe Photoshop Elements 6.0 / 7.0
2) Roxio Creator 2009
3) ACDSee Photo Power Pack 2009
4) ACDSee Photo Manager
5) Sony Photo Go Editing Software
Which is the best value: price versus ease of use / understanding?
Mail this postTagged with: adobe photoshop elements • editing software • forrest gump • microsoft • microsoft windows • photo manager • photo restoration • repair software • restoration repair • software programs • sony • sony photo • windows xp
Filed under: Windows Repair Software
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man all the above softwares are shit when compared to coral draw it's one of it's kind and it also has a very user friendly interface………
1 Adobe Photoshop
i use Adobe Photoshop Elements 7.0 it's good
free photo editing software site: http://freephotoediting-software.blogspot.com/
ADOBE PHOTOSHOP BEST
You cant beat Photoshop, but if you are on a tight budget - try GIMP - its free and you get the chance to try out a lot of features that are on Photoshop, go to http://www.gimp.org/ for more details
Try Gimp, it's free and works like Adobe. Personally I wouldn't waste my money on any of those, but then again I'm a graphic designer and I have the Adobe suite.
http://www.gimp.org/
If you're an artist (if you can restore an actual paper photograph), use GIMP. If you're not, bring the photograph into a camera store and have it professionally restored. Photographic restoration is art - not something a program can do by itself. (Using a program to do it is like using any other tool - without the requisite training, talent and experience, the tool is useless. There's no "ease of use / understanding" when it comes to art - you either are an artist or you aren't, it's something you get from your genes. You can't "learn" to be right-brained, any more than you can "learn" to be tall.)