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Free Photo Editing Software Compared to Paid Photo Editing Software

For the last few days I’ve been experimenting with several different photo editing software programs and I’ll tell you it has been educational for sure. I’ve tried Microsoft Picture It, Microsoft Digital Image, Adobe Photoshop Elements 4.0 (crashed my computer and I had to do a restore to get it working again!), Pixmantec Rawshooter, Gimp, PhotoPlus 6.0 (free), and a couple of others that I won’t even take the time to mention.


Pixmantec Rawshooter Essientials photo editing software, which is free, looked to be the best of the lot except for one major drawback, my camera doesn’t take raw photos, only jpeg and tiff. However, I’ll keep this one in the back of my mind for that day when I choose to upgrade to a more powerful camera.


Adobe Photoshop Elements looked promising at first… then all of a sudden, my computer decides to crash! I don’t know, maybe I didn’t hold my lip right when I installed it or something.


Gimp is pretty a good photo editing software. Not only because it’s free but it has a few good features plus plugins. The main thing I don’t like about Gimp is that the preview screens are too small. Gimp is more difficult to install, not for the faint of heart or computer newbies.


What I have decided to do at this point is to use a combination of Microsoft Picture It and PhotoPlus. If money were no object I would probably spring for PhotoShop which seems to be the most poplar program out there. I guess I’ll just keep an eye out for anything new that comes along.


Steve McArthur
Photography Training Manual


Source: www.ezinearticles.com