Definitely a strong pro.Īfter registration, I navigated to Media for the test drive. This is actually very good, since adding Pixo to WordPress results in zero overhead. A plugin for photo editing requires registration, why? When I dug down, I found out that Pixo Editor is actually a Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) and that the WordPress plugin is just a wrapper of this SaaS. Pixo is Software-as-a-ServiceĪfter installation, it required me to register with email and password. In the description I saw “batch editing”, so I decided to give it a try. The third result was a plugin called Image Editor by Pixo. Instinctively, I googled “WordPress batch photo editing” first to see what’s on the market. All this was shouting two words: “bulk editing”. Most of the recipe posts require the retouching of almost all photos, and almost all the photos require the same editing actions. It is a cooking recipe platform, where publishers upload a lot of photos per recipe post, all taken in a single session, often with bad phone cameras, resulting in blurry photos, wrong exposition (too light or too dark), etc. We needed a bulk photo editing tool for one of our projects. Should all images have the exact same dimensions after being cropped, or should the cropping be applied proportionally? Will each photo look good after that? This is definitely not a trivial task. There is no bulk action for mass editing, and I’m not surprised – many questions arise when you think about, well, how to replicate, let’s say, the crop action on a batch of images, when all of them have different dimensions and aspect ratios. WordPress’s core has been supporting image editing for a while now, but it has one major limitation – you have to edit images one by one.
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