Last week Adobe Labs quietly unveiled Project Indigo, its impressive new (and free) computational photography app for iOS with some serious provenance. Available for iPhone 12 Pro/Pro Max, 13 Pro/Pro ...
For photography enthusiasts, the prosumer camera app market has had no shortage of great options, with longtime favorites like Halide from Lux leading the pack. Now, Adobe has decided to enter the ...
Marc Levoy, a former distinguished engineer at Google who helped put the Pixel camera on the map, helped build the app at Adobe. Marc Levoy, a former distinguished engineer at Google who helped put ...
Adobe has launched a new experimental camera app for iPhone called Project Indigo. Built by Adobe’s research team, the app is free to use and gives mobile photographers more control over their shots.
What’s happened? Adobe’s experimental camera app, Project Indigo, known for its advanced computational photography tools, has now received support for the iPhone 17-series. But there’s a catch. You ...
The decision to turn off access to the front-facing square camera sensor is a temporary solution. The decision to turn off access to the front-facing square camera sensor is a temporary solution. is ...
Smartphone cameras have come a long way, offering a level of image quality and control that is not too far from that of ‘proper’ cameras. That said, for many photographers, the quality of smartphone ...
Over the years, smartphone cameras have started producing overly processed images, which makes them look unnatural. This has given birth to new camera apps that let you capture images with minimal ...
Project Indigo is a free photography app developed by Adobe and is currently available for the iPhone. The app is designed to deliver photographs with DSLR-like reality and a ‘natural look’ on phones, ...