![]() ![]() ![]() This tool is awesome for beginners it’s easy to use and the results are great. First things first, duplicate the background layer and work off of the copy. She’s got a few issues here: piercing scars, a little acne, some under-eye circles and some fine wrinkles. ![]() I don’t know her name or who she is but she looks like an Emily to me. While generally, I don’t like to change someone’s unique and distinguishing features, there are a few easy methods that will make your photo (and your face) shine just a little bit brighter. You really don’t have to pay for very much at all if you don’t want to.Lately, as Wpromote’s lead graphic designer, I’ve gotten a lot of requests from coworkers to teach them how to remove a pimple, wrinkle or under-eye circle in Photoshop. All the apps that come free with the MacBook are also pretty awesome - I hadn’t realised you get such a plethora of useful utilities, such as Notes, TextEdit, Grab and so on, not to mention the increasingly powerful iWork trio (the online versions of which have just been updated yet again now much better than Google docs IMHO). I haven’t got round to downloading/comparing Outline yet (one of my favourite iPad apps), but probably will once my CRIMPing frenzy really takes hold. Then of course there’s Microsoft OneNote. Others worth mentioning are Metanota Pro (rather elegant minimal version of Ulysses, I suppose you could call it), and Day One (I use this journal software on iPad, but the Mac version is very nice indeed, especially the little reminder feature, which positively encourages you to diarise your life!). Notebooks on Mac is actually rather better than it is on PC (faster, for one thing), and Tree is as good as I hoped it would be. Other goodies I’m trying are Ulysses III (nice, very nice, although lack of table support is a little disappointing) and Scrivener, which is positively awesome (not to say overwhelming) on Mac. ![]() NoteSuite also has a rather nice little widget-thingy that sits in the Mac menu bar and allows you to make quick notes, todos etc., but Growly Notes has a better search function.īest of all, the very nice and responsive developer says he’s working away on the iPad version, which is very good news. I still have to test that out with foreign-language PDFs, mind you. Although it’s Mac only, it gives OneNote a run for its money - in particular, by offering a very nice ‘Print to Growly Notes’ feature that embeds PDFs in the actual page and then indexes them so the full-text search function can find them. The new version is astonishingly cool and quick, with a great search function. NoteSuite is rather elegant on the Mac, but my unexpected favourite du jour is the amazingly modestly priced Growly Notes, which has been completely rewritten since it was being given away a few years ago. Some of them will have to wait, because they’re rather expensive (I’m looking at you, OmniOutliner), but others have already been subjected to a bit of serious tyre-bashing. , I’ve been trying out all kinds of interesting note managers. Well, now my lovely MacBook Air has arrived >and therefore the end of my interest for this app. Unfortunately, for me anyway, it’s MAS only and therefore the end of my interest for this app. If Growly Bird comes out with the iPad version mentioned in the App Store release notes, Growly Notes might be a contender in the catch-all notebook category. $4.99 (U.S.) isn’t a bad price for a moderately feature-rich notebook app that has hints of Circus Ponies, Curio, and OneNote. Growly Notes (for Mac) recently released version 2 on the App Store. ![]()
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