What Reddit Says About Photography Guide Apps
We compiled 7 Reddit discussions about Photography Guide apps from 5 subreddits. Here's what real users recommend, complain about, and debate.
Reddit Threads
r/AskPhotography
For photography, darktable. You can also check digikam, rawtherapee ... I use Snapseed on my mobile devices, don’t know if they have a desktop version. ... Everything is overwhelming until you take the time and make the effort to learn how ...
r/androidapps
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r/androidapps
I recommend your app with caution that its subscription based due to Subscriptions for filters and templates. I prefer recommend Fully FREE before and after camera app.
r/iPhoneography
I’ve been thinking about maybe optimizing the native iPhone camera settings and then using an editing app with presets, like Lightroom, and I’ve also heard Labbet is good. Is anyone in a similar situation who can recommend something, considering I’m a beginner but still want that more “film‑like” re...
r/AskPhotography
Many here will walk a hundred miles to avoid Adobe for numerous reasons but not being a capable photographer’s tool that can grow with the photographer is not one of them. Nothing has the online YouTube tutorial support that Lightroom does. Even if you just begin with basic Auto Tone only, it will d...
r/photography
Disclaimer: I'm the author of the app. ... Just started using PhotoBuddy Pro. It offers over 20 photography tools for all levels of photographers. Not a bad price at $9.99 one time fee. I find most of the tools to be quite helpful. They also offer some free guides and apps.
r/chromeos
My Chromebook doesn't have Linux, so I can only speak to Android apps, but I don't think you're going to find anything better than F-stop. You can customize the overlay somewhat, and browse between photos without it, but as soon as you try to rate, delete etc.
Key Subreddits