When Google announced the Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G, it didn't just launch two phones with impressive cameras. It introduced new Google Photos editing features as well. Improvements to machine learning, artificial intelligence, and user interface mean that users will now be able to do more with light and portrait mode after taking photos. They will also have access to more granular manual controls. We'll show you how to use the Google Photos editor with all its new features that will make your pictures look even better.
Once you receive the Google Photos app update, editing your photos (whether you just took them or they are already in your archive) is easier than ever. All you need to do is tap on the photo that you want to edit, and you will see quick access to manual editing modes like brightness, contrast, saturation, tint, and warmth. Tapping into each setting presents a slider that allows you to make precisely the kind of granular edits that you want to make your photos just right.
Tap on the editing tool at the bottom of the screen (it looks like three lines with slots in them).
Scroll through the controls above such as Brightness, Contrast, White Point, Highlights, Shadows, Black Point, Saturation, Warmth, Tint, Skin tone, Blue tone, Pop, and Vignette.
Tap Save.
Android users should expect to see these updates rolling out right now. There is no word on when the features will land on iOS.
This new editing mode might just be the most exciting one announced by Google. With the help of Google's advanced AI and machine learning, Google Photos users can make remarkable adjustments with lighting and portrait effects after the shot has been captured. As with the other manual controls mentioned above, portrait lighting will be easily accessible in the editing menu, with granular slider controls and gestures that allow you to tap on the photo and apply just the right degree of background blur around your subject. These features will work regardless of whether you first took the photo in portrait mode or not.
As you can see from the first two images of me, as soon as you take a selfie or image capture, Google Photos will ask if you want to try Portrait mode. If you tap that, you will get some quick toggles to enhance your portrait or change it to a black and white image or introduce a pop of color.
However, if you want to adjust portrait lighting effects after a shot has been captured, here's what you do.
Tap on Portrait light.
Tap Save Copy.
The portrait lighting feature first debuted with the Google Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a XL announcement but has already started rolling out to older Pixel models, like my Pixel 4a.
In a February 2021 feature update, Google brought a new editing experience to videos in the Google Photos app. The app already supported video trimming, stabilizing, and rotating. Still, now users can crop, change perspective, add filters, and perform granular edits like brightness, contrast, saturation, and warmth — just like they can on still images. Here's where to find those features.
One of the best upgrades to the Google Photos app is something that you don't technically need to search for or implement, and that is Google's improved AI suggestions feature. Google Photos has already offered users tips on fixing lighting or creating animations, but those were inconsistent at best. Now, the app will more consistently surface suggestions that the AI thinks will improve your photos, which you can accept, reject, or accept and tweak further in the manual editing controls.
You should now see the editing tools slider at the bottom of the screen, with some AI suggestions above it that include Enhance, Warm, and Cool. Tap on one of these options, such as Enhance.
Google has said that new AI suggestions will first come to Pixel phones and introduce more kinds of suggestions, like the new Dynamic filter, over the course of the year during quarterly Pixel feature drops.
Many of these new features will come first to the Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G phones, two of the best Android phones of 2020.
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12/04/2021 01:00 PM
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