Psst... it's already on this site.![]()
Downloading it now to test it out. With my smoke signal internet it should finish downloading by day after tomorrow. Ha!
Not sure if it's free for good or a trial, I had nothing come up when installing it asking me about a 15 day trial but I did see it in the info on the website somewhere.
NIK is not "just presets". UPoint Technology (aka "Control Points") makes NIK Tools unique, and incredibly powerful.I'm finding it hard to understI don't think it's anything that special, I mean it's just pre sets. I used it for a few hours and may never use it again, I'll try in the future but it's likely I won't use it often, unless I learn something new about it.
It's not just "pre-sets"... It's strongest feature, compared to other editing software is the Control Points. I'm sort of ambivalent about the whole thing... It's nice that it's now free, and I'm not particularly pleased that I paid for it... I do find it to be very useful, and surely their intention is NOT to update or support it, so will miss it when it starts to break...
Understanding Control PointsInteresting, I have to use it more, like I've said I've only used it a little. What do you mean control points?
Link works for me... It's a NIK Tools YouTube video explaining Control Points.Bad link? Is it a page on nikonites?
Watch the video on Control points.
Basically, you can drop a Control point on your image... and resize the the Control point... at that point, with the CP selected, the adjustment slders only apply to the area encompassed by the control point.
An example. An image with a face. The face is too dark. Drop a CP on the face, and expand/contract the CP to include JUST the face. Adjust the brightness slider, and only the face is brightened...
It's even more than that... Control Points are "intelligent" in that they select not just by size but also by things like tonal value; when grouped the individual points will "talk" to one another to control the selection. Since they select based on tonal values, selections are smooth and transition-less.Watch the video on Control points.
Basically, you can drop a Control point on your image... and resize the the Control point... at that point, with the CP selected, the adjustment slders only apply to the area encompassed by the control point.
An example. An image with a face. The face is too dark. Drop a CP on the face, and expand/contract the CP to include JUST the face. Adjust the brightness slider, and only the face is brightened...
NIK is not "just presets". UPoint Technology (aka "Control Points") makes NIK Tools unique, and incredibly powerful.
Awesome! Downloading now. Not tried it before, as I'm too tight, so looking forward to re-working some old images!