

You can grow it to cover missed spots sure but it starts growing those that were already pretty good to cause effects on the background without an option to limit that.

Now you have to manually blend it in a different program. Or a recover original detail slider which acted as a soft blend mode to get something in between which was useful against some ai errors as well. You had more choices and could make some tweaks as there always were parts which looked "funny" in some images (masking out with a brush in worst case situations but you could do it).

On the official TopazLabs website, you will always find the actual prices for Gigapixel AI and other programs as well.Oww the control is pretty limited compared to the standalone apps. If you are satisfied with the program, you can purchase it for $99.99 after the trial. The developers offer a Gigapixel AI free 30-day trial. It requires a graphics processor with OpenGL 3.3 or later version (Intel HD5000 or higher, Nvidia GTX 760 or better, AMD R9 280 or higher).

Gigapixel AI is compatible with 64-bit Windows 7+ and Mac OS X 10.11+. Only after that use Gigapixel to enlarge the image in the same TIFF final format. Firstly, save the image in the TIFF format. You can try to get around this feature with a little trick. Even adjusting color and contrast in Photoshop does not help. If you save the image in TIFF or JPEG formats, it appears blurry. It is impossible to save a file in the same format if it is originally in RAW. The program can’t boast of the proper work with RAW files. Although the developers promise the simultaneous editing of about 10,000 shots. I tested this feature and uploaded 30 photos at the same time. For example, you can change all pictures with the resolution of 1260 × 720 pixels into 24.14-inch images with enhanced highlights and shadows. Fast Batch Editingīatch editing allows you to edit not just one but several photos at once. Gigapixel AI helps achieve natural portrait shots with clear details. When enlarging such a small photo, the end result may be decent or a terrible one. You have a portrait or a story photo with a width of 400 pixels. To show how this function works, here is an example.
