Photopea

Photopea (/ˈftəˈp/) is a web-based raster and vector graphics editor used for image editing, making illustrations, web design or converting between different image formats.

Photopea
Developer(s)Ivan Kuckir
Initial release14 September 2013 (2013-09-14)
Stable release
4.8 / 11 June 2020 (2020-06-11)
Repository
Written inJavaScript
PlatformWeb browser
Available in39 languages[1]
List of languages
Albanian, Arabic, Brazilian Portuguese, Bulgarian, Catalan, Croatian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Estonian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hebrew, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Simplified Chinese, Slovak, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Tibetan, Traditional Chinese, Turkish, Ukrainian, Vietnamese
TypeRaster graphics editor
Licensesoftware as a service
Alexa rank 3,547 (June 2020)[2]
Websitehttps://www.photopea.com

Photopea is advertising-supported software. It is compatible with multiple web browsers, including Opera, Edge, Chrome, and Firefox.[3] The app is compatible with Photoshop’s PSD as well as JPEG, PNG, DNG, GIF, SVG, PDF and other image file formats. While browser based, Photopea stores all files locally, and does not upload any files to a server.[4]

Features

Photopea offers a wide variety of image editing tools, including features like spot healing, a clone stamp healing brush, and a patch tool. The software supports layers, layer masks, channels, selections, paths, smart objects, layer styles, text layers, filters and vector shapes.[5]

Reception

Photopea has received positive coverage due to its similarities to Adobe Photoshop in design and workflow, making it an easier program for those trained in Photoshop to use, compared to other free raster image editors such as GIMP.[6]

gollark: They use them to do artificial market segmentation (limited transcoding and stuff on consumer cards), so they can't really open-source them without (*the horror*) being more consumer-friendly.
gollark: No sense buying a more expensive product which performs the same, and Nvidia's Linux driver support is *evil*.
gollark: Though people will inevitably buy Nvidia anyway because who knows.
gollark: As long as they can make something which is better perf/$, I don't see the problem.
gollark: It's actually worse than my laptop iGPU.

See also

References

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