Skip to main content

Google's Snapseed app beats Apple to the punch with RAW support

Apple iPhone 6S Plus
Jessica Lee Star/Digital Trends
Snapseed is getting serious about photo editing – a new iOS update adds both RAW support and new portrait retouching tools.

The Google-owned app is bringing RAW capability to iOS just before Apple introduces its own support for the digital negative files. While Apple announced the feature would be part of iOS 10, the software update isn’t publicly available yet.

Though the official release date of the updated operating system hasn’t been announced, it will likely be addressed in the Apple launch event on September 7.

Interestingly enough, the update is only for iOS, not the Android version — but with Android already supporting RAW, Snapseed added the feature for those users nearly a year ago.

While iOS is expected to handle RAW files soon, Snapseed users have to work around the missing feature for now by uploading the RAW files to Google Drive via computer and using the “send a file” option to export images to mobile. While the extra steps likely take out the main reason for using a mobile app for editing in the first place, users will soon be able to shoot RAW with the iPhone’s camera. The app is compatible with the RAW file types from 144 different cameras.

RAW support in Snapseed gives users more flexibility over adjusting the white balance, curves, and other fine-tuning compared to a compressed JPEG file. According to the developers, the addition of RAW compatibility also allows for non-destructive photo editing — in other words, it’s easier to undo an effect.

Along with the RAW compatibility, the app now includes several portrait retouching features, including a healing tool and skin smoothing. The update also adds a Face Spotlight for brightening portraits as well as a few more oddballs, like the option to whiten eyes.

Snapseed version 2.9 is now available for download from the App Store.

Editors' Recommendations

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
Google is launching a powerful new AI app for your Android phone
Google Gemini app on Android.

Remember Bard, Google’s answer to ChatGPT? Well, it is now officially called Gemini. Also, all those fancy AI features that previously went by the name Duet AI have been folded under the Gemini branding. In case you haven’t been following up all the AI development flood, the name is derived from the multi-modal large language model of the same name.

To go with the renaming efforts, Google has launched a standalone Gemini app on Android. Moreover, the Gemini experience is also being made available to iPhone users within the Google app on iOS. But wait, there’s more.

Read more
Apple is updating one of the oldest apps on your iPhone
The Apple iPhone 15 Pro Max and iPhone 14 Pro showing the screens.

Apple iPhone 14 Pro (left) and iPhone 15 Pro Max Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Apple has updated one of its original iPhone apps, the Clock app, in the first iOS 17.4 beta. Specifically, the update includes a small, but significant change to the Stopwatch function.

Read more
Apple is about to change iPhone web browsing forever
The search bar position in Safari on iOS 15.

Apple has today announced a major change that could revolutionize the web-browsing experience for iPhone users. Alas, this browsing boon will be limited to users in the EU bloc. This news was announced alongside Apple's plans to add sideloading and third-party app stores to the iPhone.

To comply with the EU’s landmark Digital Markets Act (DMA), Apple says it will allow developers to use other browser engines for their web browsers. That means Apple will no longer force them to use its own WebKit rendering engine, which is the underlying tech behind what any web browser can do on your phone. That’s a massive rule change.
Deliberately spoiling the browsing experience

Read more