
Snapseed is one of the few Android apps that has the ability to edit DNG files, which are RAW image files created under Adobe’s proprietary image standard. This gives users the ability to tweak and edit these hi-res kinds of images for better output, specifically for the serious mobile photographers. The latest update to the app brings even better editing quality, as well as applying filter defaults for batch photos that need editing.
The update allows users to better edit RAW images that have too much “noise”, meaning there is too much unwanted elements that need to be removed in the photograph. If you’re editing a lot of photos and would like to apply the same edits and changes to them, you can now copy the RAW settings from one image and then paste it onto another. If you apply a specific filter to an image, then the app automatically remembers it and then becomes the default for the next image, unless you change it of course.
It used to be that we were just happy having the ability to do basic edits to our photos and then use a filter to make it prettier. But the more advanced our mobile cameras are, and the more mobile that we become, then the demand is for far more complicated editing stuff, almost similar to how actual photo editing programs like Photoshop does it.
The update also brings the usual bug fixes and improvements to supposedly make the app more stable. You can now update your Snapped to version 2.2 through the Google Play Store.
SOURCE: Snapseed








Snapseed can be said as the mostly popular app in 2015 for editing photos both in android as well as in ios phones. I am using it in my android phone as well.