When we selected it, it was listed in the Folder pane. That, after a rather long delay, opened a Finder window so we could navigate to the external.
We actually wanted to access an external drive, so we clicked on the Plus in the Folder menu bar. When we quit Exposure 7 and relaunched it from Recent Applications, it came up in Application mode and we were in business.ĭesktop, Documents and Pictures folders are displayed as starting points. Using Alfred to launch Exposure 7, we got Plug-in mode, not Application mode. Because, you know, it doesn't need to.īut here's where we ran into a problem. Application mode (let's call it) displays a Folder navigation option in the bottom of the left pane. There's just one little problem with this. Bottom left corner navigates your disk with a display of images in the main pane. It navigates your system rather than uses the Finder to navigate the system.įolders. FILES & FOLDERSĮxposure 7, as we mentioned above, does not open files. That's not quite as intuitive an operation as it might be. If you run the standalone application, you have to open an image file to work on. You can run Exposure 7 as a standalone application or as a plug-in from Photoshop or Lightroom. Our screen shots are intended merely as sketches, reserving more detail for our upcoming review. In this preview we'll briefly peek at the major new features.
The $149 Exposure 7 is available as an update for $69 with free updates available to all purchasers of Exposure 6, which launched in June. It's compatible with Photoshop CS6 or later and Lightroom 5.
From legendary creative effects plugin to award-winning photo editor: introducing Exposure X3, the advanced non-destructive RAW editor that handles your full workflow.