You might expect that by not demanding a fee for a photo organizing program, you’d have to settle for a largely scaled-down version of its costly equivalents with StudioLine Photo. We were pleasantly surprised to see this wasn’t the case with StudioLine Photo, and the application is brimming with features that not only make it easier to sort and search for photos, but which can instantly improve the appearance of your images.
The main premise of StudioLine Photo is to help you whip your photo collection into some sort of order, and it does this admirably. You start with an Image Archive, which is basically a database where you can load in all of your images. From here with StudioLine Photo, you can create a hierarchical tree system of folders based through an Explorer-style interface, making it a painless process. Sorting through your images is aided by the capacity for adding information about a photo using the ‘Descriptors’ data, photos, allowing you to categorize by image topic, date, location or person. You can even enter a star rating in StudioLine Photo for each image to help you later in the sorting process. Another nice inclusion is the ability to change the size of thumbnail previews using a slider when viewing all the images within a folder.
As if StudioLine Photo's slick sorting facilities weren’t impressive enough, StudioLine Photo boasts a range of editing tools that rival many priced image editors. There’s a diverse variety of tools in StudioLine Photo ranging from preprocessing, through photo correction, to special effects, all of which can be previewed and applied with ease. The fact that you can apply changes you’ve made to one photograph to hundreds of other images in one click with StudioLine Photo is another major boon, and is ideal if you want to turn a batch of images into black and white, or apply an auto-color correction to an entire album of photos, for instance.
The StudioLine Photo user interface is generally a joy to use, with lots of customizable options, and draggable palettes like those you see in professional editing suites. There are a couple of bothersome aspects of the StudioLine Photo interface which could do with changing though, such as the fact that an image loads in a new pop-up menu when its thumbnail is clicked on, rather than in the main window (as a tab perhaps). The tips boxes in StudioLine Photo that spring up a little too frequently can also get a tad irritating, especially as there seems to be no way to permanently disable them.
Apart from these minor niggles, StudioLine Photo is a fantastic program which is arguably the cheapest way of effectively managing your image collection. The addition of features for creating slide shows, web galleries and emails only serves to raise StudioLine Photo's status as a serious contender to its big budget rivals.
Download StudioLine Photo Basic 3.70.21 in Softonic