Editing RAW images on an Apple iPad

“If your camera uses a RAW format supported by Apple’s iOS system on the iPad and you have a photo-editing app that works with RAW files, you should be able to import, edit and save your photos as you go,” J. D. Biersdorfer writes for The New York Times.

“When you are ready to edit photos, you first need to get the picture files from the camera to the tablet,” Biersdorfer writes. “You can do this in a few ways, including using one of Apple’s camera-card adapters plugged into the iPad to download the original RAW files, or beaming the photos wirelessly from camera to tablet with a camera memory card enabled for Wi-Fi.”

“The $20 Affinity for iPad, the freemium RAW Power and the older (but free) Snapseed are among the apps that can edit RAW files on the tablet,” Biersdorfer writes. “You can also sync the edited photos to a cloud server like iCloud Photo Library.”

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Read more in the full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: If you haven’t driven an iPad lately, you haven’t driven an iPad.

Halide – RAW Manual Camera by Chroma Noir is an iOS-only app that’s an absolute steal for just $5.99. Get it for your iPhone if you’re the least bit serious about photography.

SEE ALSO:
The power of shooting RAW photographs on iPhone X – December 6, 2017
Affinity Photo brings professional photo editing to iPad – June 5, 2017
Apple unveils iPad Pro in 10.5- and 12.9-inch models with the world’s most advanced displays & breakthrough performance – June 5, 2017
Apple’s iOS 11 brings powerful new features to iPhone and iPad this fall – June 5, 2017
MacDailyNews presents live coverage of Apple’s WWDC 2017 keynote address

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