
I bought it via a Humble Bundle in December, and was impressed: the results could be slightly over the top with photos of things like stained glass windows, but as an effortless 'what about this' look for portraits, landscapes, and street photography they were remarkable. People who'd paid for 1.0 or an annual subscription would get it for free, while those who were up to three months into a monthly sub got a 50% discount. July 2017, when they sensibly went back to a license system. The limit and the shift to a subscription model did not go down well, so ten days later in May, they offered a lifetime subscription to anyone who'd bought 1.0. were an early user on a Mac, you got just six months free.Įither way, you could only use it on up to 300 photos a month.

(Yes, saying the price is 'normally' $7 when you've announced it will be free, erm, $6 a month and actually charging $3 or $4 is confusing, to put it at its best.) If you had bought 1.0, i.e. Oh, it wouldn't: 2.0 users were expected to buy a subscription: for $5.99/month (so $72 a year) according to the original announcement, or $4 a month / $36 for a year according to a saved checkout page.
Photolemur 3 serial number update#
It also added a Windows version and would be a free update for everyone who owned version 1.0. because that was one of the features that was said to be removed in the version 2.0 release in April 2017, as part of making it a 'one click' program: a new engine would do all the enhancements automatically. Not having a Mac, I never used it, but as well as a slider that let you chose how much work it did on your photo, going from 'realistic' to 'vivid', it looks like you could also do things like crop photos in the program.

For that, you could use it on up to twenty photos at a time.

was first published in October 2016 as a photo quality improver for the Mac, with users paying $29 (or $39 for use on up to five Macs).
