The better way to better images.

See how Aperture lets you import, manage, and enhance
your photos in one simple, integrated workflow.

Import images in a flash. Manage them like a pro.

Pop a memory card filled with new images into your card reader and Aperture gets right to work, instantly displaying thumbnails and offering intelligent external hard drive ways to add copyright, captions, keywords, and other metadata as you import them. You can also import images from hard drives, optical media, even iPhoto.

laptop and camera

Shoot tethered.

Connect a camera to your Mac via USB or FireWire and save the photos directly in an Aperture project.

Store your images wherever and however you like — directly in Aperture, on external drives, even on huge import screenshot network storage devices. Aperture keeps track of every photo. Organize photos logically in projects, folders, albums, and Smart Albums. Aperture also provides powerful tools for adding metadata to images, making them easy to find long after you import them.

import metadata

The value of metadata.

Use powerful tools to add ratings, copyright, captions, and other metadata to images. With Aperture, you can search for virtually anything — even specific image adjustments.

Related Tutorials

  • Importing Basics Click to play src=""
  • Tethering Click to play src=""
  • Rating Images Click to play src=""
  • Filtering and Searching Click to play src=""

Make selects quickly and easily.

  • Click to play src=""

    Rating photos, assigning keywords, creating Smart Albums, arranging photos on a Light Table — all help National Geographic photographer Jim Richardson create compelling photo essays.

Jim Richardson
on storytelling

See how the photographer crafts stirring visual stories using Aperture.

Related Tutorials

  • Using Quick Preview Click to play src=""
  • Using Compare Mode Click to play src=""
  • Using the Loupe Tool Click to play src=""

You’ve added hundreds of new photos to your Aperture library. Now you need to review them all and pick the very best — your selects. Aperture lets you edit photo shoots using tools such as Quick Preview mode for rapid-fire image review and Compare mode for viewing two or more images side by side. With Aperture, you can even zoom and pan multiple images at once for tight comparisons before making a pick.

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Using the Loupe.

The versatile Loupe magnifies images from 50 to 1600 percent. Use it to compare details in similar images.

Review and rate hands free.

To speed your way through a big project, use arrow keys to cycle through your photos and number keys to rate them.

4 stars
Makeselects20080206

Turn your good photos
into beautiful images.

With your favorite shots selected, it’s now time to use Aperture’s adjustment tools to make your best photos look even better. Aperture takes you way beyond the basics of straightening, cropping, and improving exposure.Inspector hud screenshot Use the new Vibrancy and Definition tools to create beautiful photos with enhanced detail and saturation. Or darken the corners of your image with the Vignette tool. Copying adjustments from one image to another is simple using the Lift and Stamp tool. And since all adjustments are nondestructive, you don’t have to worry about damaging your original master images. Aperture never touches them.

Color adjustment hud screenshot

Make selective color adjustments.

Use the enhanced color controls to select a hue. Then make perfect spot adjustments with Luminosity and Saturation sliders.


enhancement screenshot

Recover lost detail.

Powerful new tools, including Highlight Recovery and Black Point, let you salvage images you might once have discarded.

  • Click to play src=""

    Bob Davis, photojournalist and assignment photographer, demonstrates how he uses a variety of new image adjustment tools: Recovery, Black Point, Vibrancy, Retouch, and Vignette.

Bob Davis on
adjustments

See how Davis uses the new adjustment tools to perfect his images.

Related Tutorials

  • Using Vignette and Devignette Click to play src=""
  • Using Lift and Stamp Click to play src=""
  • Recovering Highlights Click to play src=""

Take the final steps
and showcase your best work.

  • Click to play src=""

    Wedding photographer Sara France loves Aperture books and uses the flexible book layout editor to “customize each layout and create unique, great-looking products” for her clients.

Sara France on
creating books

France shows you how easy it is to design exquisite custom books.

Export options

Flexible export options

With every photo looking picture perfect, it’s time to present your best work to others. Use one of the export Flickr logo plug-ins in Aperture to send your photos to Flickr — or SmugMug, Gallery, Zenfolio, or Picasa. Send them to colleagues via Mail. Include them in iLife or iWork documents. Or make them “to go,” syncing them to iPhone, iPod, or Apple TV.

Related Tutorials

  • Exporting versions, masters, and projects Click to play src=""
web gallery

Publish online.

Aperture offers fully integrated .Mac Web Gallery support, so you can publish a portfolio using your .Mac account in minutes. You can even use your password-protected Web Gallery to deliver photos, letting others download JPEG or original RAW files directly from your site. View a Web Gallery

Related Tutorials

  • Creating a Web Gallery Click to play src=""
bound books

Your book. To order.

Aperture provides all the tools you need to create custom-designed books in small, medium, and large formats. You can place, resize, rotate, and mask photos, so your book looks exactly the way you want. For a professional touch, include a full-bleed, wraparound dust jacket on your next hardcover book. Then place your order without leaving Aperture.View Print Products

Related Tutorials

  • Making Books Click to play src=""
Prints.

Printing prowess.

The latest printers from Canon and Epson support 16-bit printing. And so does Aperture, letting you produce high-quality prints with smoother gradients and better color fidelity. The new Print dialog also features a print sharpening slider for fine-tuning sharpness without wasting paper. Ready for pro-quality prints? You can order prints — up to 20 by 30 inches — directly from Aperture.

Related Tutorials

  • Making Prints and Contact Sheets Click to play src=""
Try Aperture for free. Download the free trial.