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ImagenAI: Artificial Intelligence Will Edit Your Photos

ImagenAI: Artificial Intelligence Will Edit Your Photos

ImagenAI New Editing App

ImagenAI has announced its AI-powered photo editing desktop app for Adobe Lightroom workflows.

Its artificial intelligence’s aim is to learn your personalized editing style. In your AI profile the app analyzes each image and predicts how you will edit and apply it in a matter of seconds.

How should it be used? First, you need to teach the app your particular editing style. ImagenAI asks for 5,000 or more of your previously edited photos in a Lightroom catalog, necessary to learn your editing style. Remember: the larger the sample size provided, the more accurate a profile it can generate. The system training will take a few days, and it will inform you via e-mail about the next steps to take. Thanks to using only artificial intelligence, the app promises to work much faster than any other tool that needs the human element.

Watch this video:

The application works on both PC and Mac and is free to try for your first 1000 images. After this limit, you can choose to cancel or to sign up for the service on a $7 monthly subscription plus a “pay-per-use” fee that scales down in cost the more images you send through per month.

Will this app help dental photographers in their everyday work? As soon as we can check this, we’ll let you know!

The emergence of artificial intelligence has made itself more significant over the last few years: Adobe, Skylum and Canon have their own tools and it seems like there will be more.

Check out our online course on postproduction!

Canon EOS R5 with IBIS Bug?

Canon EOS R5 with IBIS Bug?

Canon EOS R5 produces blurry photos?

Well, that’s unexpected!

A Canon EOS R5 user has reported a replicable glitch that appears to be caused by using the camera’s in-body image stabilization which results in blurry photographs.

The problem occured while shooting in a mode where in-body image stabilization (IBIS) is set to “always on.” What happened?

Straight from the horse’s mouth: while shooting, the first picture produced in the sequence is significantly more blurry than any pictures thereafter. However, if the shutter continues to be half-pressed, while in single or continuous autofocus, photographs produced come out just fine.

This stands in the opposite of Canon’s introducing EOS R5 and R6 cameras as the “first Canon cameras with 5-axis in-body” IBIS, which can “deliver an industry-leading 8-stops of IS when the cameras are paired with certain lenses“.

Canon responded that its technical team is currently investigating the issue.

We’re waiting for the next steps of this issue and will keep you posted.

Check out more details on the R5 here!