Writer, musician, and phone geek.
Find my iOS themes in Cydia: ClearHighNotifications, ClearLowNotifications, GmailSMS, LS Nimbus Wide, LS Frost for iPhone 5, ClearNotifications, and TypoClockClear.
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Posts tagged "iphone"

Between this site and my illustration blog theCarryAll, I often find myself creating posts on my iPhone during the down moments of a day: during a long car trip; on a lunch break; in waiting rooms or check-out lines. Because of that, I’ve developed a workflow that makes use of a range of iOS apps; some of them are workhorses that do many things well, while others are narrowly focused apps that excel in one or two areas. Here are a few of them.

Snapseed:
My everyday, go-to editing app. Absolutely amazing in both how much it does (color correction, crops, sharpening, center-focus, tilt-shift, filters, etc) and in how well it does it. Nearly every image on both my sites has passed through Snapseed at some point.

Photoforge2/Photogene2:
More complicated than Snapseed, I use these not for everyday edits, but for when I need something like Layer and Masks support (Photoforge2) or a Clone Stamp (Photogene2). I also use Photoforge2 for its Curves support—great for tweaking color images with fine control. Probably more complicated than most users want.

Phonto:
The only app you’ll need for text-on-photos. Add as much as you’d like, import your own fonts (a must for anyone with any interest in typography—no app will have it all), style your text, adjust kerning and line spacing, opacity, and more.

Screenshot: A bit of a specialty app, but one I use often when reviewing apps on my site. Both of these use your own screenshots and place them in an image frame for a device of your choosing.

Diptic:
Create photo sets of multiple images, using over 50 different adjustable layouts. Change border color and width, corner radius, etc. Great for side-by-side photo comparisons as well as more artistic collections. Often used in conjunction with Screenshot (see above) to produce the device images on jackjohnbrown.com

ToonPaint:
Create black-and-white line drawings from your photos (color can be painted back in later if desired). Great controls for adjusting line width, black/white/grey ratios, etc. Much more refined than most “cartoon-ify” apps.

Censor Pro: A pixelation app, Censor Pro was designed primarily as a tool for obscuring private information in photos, but I use it mostly to create abstracted versions of famous paintings. (A special thanks to Censor Pro developer Kevin Lawson for inspiring this post; a recent update to his app added a feature that arose from our correspondence, and the new functionality made me realize how much I rely on mobile apps for my everyday creative duties.)

Superimpose: Similar to Photoforge2’s Layers/Masks options but easier to use in many situations. Most often I use it to isolate an image, delete the surrounding background, and place the remaining image on a new background. Many of the album covers at theCarryAll were done primarily with Superimpose before being further edited with the apps above.

And last but not least, Tumblita makes it easy to post it all up to Tumblr, where I host my sites. Support for multiple accounts and some extra features still missing from the official app make Tumblita a great app for anyone who needs a serious on-the-go solution to managing multiple Tumblrs.

 

 

Since its inception, Messages+ (the SMS replacement app from developer team Intelliborn) has been bundled into the larger IntelliScreenX app—purchase a license for the latter and you were able to use Messages+ as part of the ISX experience. But should you decide you only wanted to use the SMS plug-in, you were out of luck; Intelliborn forced users to buy a separate license if they wanted a standalone Messages+ app.

As of today—thanks largely to Cydia creator Jay Freeman—that has changed. Read the details after the jump.

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After a few days of teasers, new tweak SemiRestore has begun its beta phase. For jailbreakers, the tweak—which does a near-complete restore of an iOS device but stops short of loading a new firmware—could mean the difference between keeping and losing a jailbreak.

The good news is that early versions seem to be working as promised. Follow the link for iDb’s walkthrough, and keep up on the release schedule by following developer CoolStar on Twitter.

Substrate and WinterBoard Come to Android


After what Cydia creator Jay Freeman describes as “years of effort,” the theme engine known as WinterBoard—long a staple of the iOS jailbreak world, where users use the app to change the look of their devices—has come to the Android platform. If the vast world of iOS theming is anything to go by, this should be very interesting. 

And for the more technically minded, Freeman (better known to the jailbreak community as @saurik) has also released full documentation on iOS substrate—the code that powers Cydia. 

Cydia Tip:

Set Cydia to ignore upgrades to certain packages by changing your preferences in the Package Settings of individual apps. Useful for situations when a newer version doesn’t support your OS, or (as with the recent Grabby update) when it’s a paid update you don’t need.