Funtastic Photos a new Mac compatible photo editor
Posted by Dennis Sellers
Aug 20, 2008 at 12:02pm
Ohanaware, a new company specializing in photo software products, has released Funtastic Photos, a non-destructive and fully reversible photo editor. With it , photos aren’t permanently changed; they can be changed, changed again, undone, changed and then “rewound” to their original state.
Advanced controls are available in Funtastic Photos, allowing custom editing or tweaking of the photo. All the advanced controls are consolidated into a single place. During each photo editing session Funtastic Photos provides unlimited undos and redos. Settings can be transferred between photos using copy & paste and/or shared with family and friends as a custom “1-Click Style.”
From a toolbar button, a photo can be sent via “fun card,” email, posted to photo sharing sites (such as Facebook, Flickr, MobileMe, Picasa Web Albums, etc.), added to iPhoto, set as the desktop picture, transferred to a cell phone or even into the current iChat conversation. Funtastic Photos also features a print and layout system, which allows for the photos to be printed in a number of layouts such as photo collages, posters, greetings cards and “fun cubes.”
Funtastic Photos Leverages some of the talents of Mac OS X, utilizing the ImageIO Kit for loading and saving many image file formats, Quartz 2D for 2D graphics and Spotlight to aid with tracking down photos. Funtastic Photos is available at an introductory price of US$ 34.99. A demo is available for download.
Funtastic Photos requires a Power Mac G4, G5 or Intel based Macintosh computer, running Mac OS X 10.4 or later.
“Macsimum News” is a proud supporter of Planet Gumbo, which feeds the hungry. We urge you to help them in their efforts.
Article Information
Comment on this Article Print this Article Email this Article Digg This
Contributor
Dennis Sellers
Dennis has been a newspaper editor/reporter (seven years) and teacher (seven years). He has over 4,000 magazine, newspaper and online articles to his credit. He has also covered the Mac and tech industries for over a decade for such online publications as MacCentral, MacMinute and now MacsimumNews.








