Affinity 1.8



The 1.8 update of Affinity Photo packs in several quality-of-life improvements. We take you through our top 5 new features in this article.
  1. Affinity 1.8.2
  2. Affinity 1.8 Update
  3. New Affinity Designer Update
Affinity 1.8Affinity

Affinity Photo 1.8 is here, and as usual is free to existing users on the platform(s) you have purchased a license for. Read our handy guide—How to install Affinity updates—if you need any help updating.

Let’s take a look at what’s new in Affinity Photo 1.8…

Affinity Photo has become the first choice for photography and creative professionals around the world, who love its speed, power and precision. Born to work hand-in-hand with the latest powerful computer technology, it’s the only fully-loaded photo editor integrated across macOS, Windows and iOS.

1. PSD Smart Object import

  1. Affinity Photo 1.8 can open and edit Smart Objects in layered Photoshop PSD files. It's already adept at creating re-editable effects thanks to its innovative Life Filters. (Image credit: James Abbott) Interface.
  2. Import your image to Affinity Photo 1.8 (or higher) 5. Launch Nik Collection by DxO plugins via Affinity Photo 1.8 (or higher) Go to Filters Plugins Nik Collection “Plugin Name” For Windows users: 1. Installation & create plugins. Process Nik Collection by DxO installation.
  3. From Zero to Superhero: A beginner’s guide to Affinity Designer 1.8 Paperback – March 28, 2020 by Dawid Tuminski (Author) 3.4 out of 5 stars 10 ratings.

This feature is one we know a lot of you have been waiting for. Affinity Photo has always been able to import (and export) PSD documents, but now it can also import smart objects. Smart objects are converted to ‘embedded documents’ and a similar workflow can be applied: simply select the embedded document layer and choose Edit document on the context toolbar (or double click on the layer thumbnail) to open the smart object in a new tab. This is commonly used for mockups where you can drop in your own imagery, then go back to the parent document and see your design with the correct perspective.

2. Manual lens corrections

Previous versions of Affinity Photo offered automatic lens corrections, but 1.8 offers a complete manual override, allowing you to apply any lens profile correction you wish. This is a boon for photographs taken with manual lenses (no electronic connection) as they don’t communicate lens data to the camera, and it’s also useful for lenses that are adapted to other camera bodies, since the adapters will often change the lens ID which prevents it from being automatically identified.

3. Enhanced plugin support

Another feature new to Affinity Photo 1.8 is one a lot of you have asked for—improved plugin support, especially for the new Nik collection, where you can now work with wide colour spaces and enjoy full functionality with 16-bit precision documents.

4. Improved RAW processing for batch processing

Affinity Photo’s RAW development has undergone quite the transformation since its initial debut in version 1.4—it’s had some notable improvements, some of which are explored in the article What’s new with RAW in Affinity Photo 1.7?. Up until now, though, those improvements have been restricted to the development of single RAW files when loaded into the Develop Persona.

Adobe lightroom serial. With version 1.8, however, you can now take advantage of 32-bit output, removal of the default tone curve, improved demosaicing, improved noise reduction, automatic lens corrections and wide colour space support when using RAW files with batch processing.

Here are a couple of workflow examples:

  • Panorama stitching: if you set the RAW Output Format to 32-bit on the Develop Assistant, you can then batch process to 32-bit TIFF files (don’t forget to change the output format for the TIFF export options) and stitch those TIFFs. Because 32-bit is an unbounded pixel format, you don’t have to worry about clipping highlights or losing valuable pixel data, and you can tone map your finished panorama, giving you complete control over its tonality.
  • Statistical stacking: astrophotography is a great example where you absolutely need all the precision you can muster. You can take the same approach as with panorama stitching by processing to 32-bit TIFFs and then adding them to a new stack. This allows you to take advantage of the extra precision for the tonal stretching required with astrophotography processing.

5. Selection Brush antialiasing

The powerful Selection Brush Tool now has a new option which is enabled by default, and it’s called Soft edges. Whenever you create a selection using this brush, when you release the mouse button to commit the selection some quick edge analysis is performed and the selection becomes ‘matted’ or antialiased. This is an incredible timesaver because it negates the need to jump into selection refinement for quite a number of use cases. Previously, even if you were cutting out a straightforward object with distinct edges, you would often need to use selection refinement to avoid having a ‘jagged’ cutout—now, simply create your selection, add a mask and you’re done!

You can of course disable ‘Soft edges’ on the context toolbar if you prefer a selection comprised of absolute pixels (e.g. for selecting shapes or working with pixel art).

And that’s not all…

OK, so this is more than five things, but I’d also like to draw your attention to these nice little additions to Affinity Photo 1.8…

Enhanced brush modifier

This little-known feature is incredibly useful for brush-based workflows, especially architecture workflows where you need to quickly create oval brushes for blocking in shadow detail.

With a brush tool selected, holding Ctrl+Alt (macOS) or Alt+Right click (Windows) then dragging with left-click will offer you the usual modifier to alter the brush Width and Hardness. All fairly standard so far. However, if you single click on the left mouse button, you will now toggle to Shape and Spacing instead. As mentioned above, this allows you to quickly create a ‘squished’ or oval brush shape. Single-clicking again will toggle to Rotation, then another single click will move back to Width and Hardness.

Between these three modifier options, you have an expanded amount of control over your brush properties without ever leaving your canvas.

Affinity 1.8

Improved New Document dialog with templates (available in all 1.8 updates)

A new feature found across all Affinity apps is the redesigned New Document dialog, with intuitive categories for common presets and a brand new Templates section—this new template feature allows you to install third party templates and create your own from existing documents.

Metadata editing

Previously, Affinity Photo would read image metadata, but its editing capabilities were somewhat restricted—in 1.8, however, you can now edit file information, IPTC details, copyright declarations and other important fields during the editing process. Metadata import is now more robust too, ensuring vendor-specific tags are not lost when images are brought into Affinity Photo.

Canon CR3 RAW file support

Widely requested by many users, Canon’s new CR3 RAW format is now supported for RAW development: CR3 is used by Canon’s newer cameras such as the 90D, 250D, M50 and new mirrorless EOS R, Ra and RP models to name a few.

Affinity 1.8

Affinity 1.8.2

Many other improvements and fixes

It wouldn’t be a major point release without tons of quality-of-life improvements! Here’s a list of the most impressive upgrades:

  • High intensity colours are now supported when compositing with filter effects (HDR authoring)
  • New stock brushes, including a masking set for quick and easy compositing
  • (macOS) A unified toolbar which increases working real estate on your screen
  • The ability to read XMP sidebar metadata (copyright information, image tagging) when developing RAW files
  • Selecting a mask now automatically toggles to a greyscale colour model, then toggles back to the previous colour model once another layer is selected
  • PSB import stability has been improved
  • The HSV colour model has been reintroduced to the HSL adjustment dialog, giving you more control over how colour saturation is applied
  • Improved JPEG encoding for better quality at reduced file sizes

Watch more tutorials

Did you know that we have a fantastic range of video tutorials for Affinity Photo?

Affinity 1.8 Update

Find out more about our 1.8 updates

Not got Affinity Photo yet?

If you are thinking about trying out Affinity Photo, head over to our main website to find out more…

At the end of 2020 we launched an exciting update for the macOS versions of our apps, one that would allow users to tap straight into the potential of Apple’s next generation of Macs and, in turn, do more, faster. This is thanks to the update’s full compatibility with Apple’s latest macOS update, Big Sur, and optimisation for M1—Apple’s newly-launched chip, specifically designed for the Mac.

This is great news for our users because the architecture of the M1, particularly having such a high-performance GPU with unified memory with the CPU, is perfect for professional creative applications. The advantages are particularly noticeable when working on documents with thousands of pixel layers, vector objects and text. Edits to pixel layers are best handled on the GPU, while vector and text on the CPU, so when you have unified memory, it allows much faster handling of these complex documents.

Our fully-featured iPad apps already take advantage of very similar architecture on the A-series chips and ever since developing for iPad, we’d always hoped that chips with this architecture would eventually come to Mac—and now they have.

Our developers were lucky enough to receive the DTK from Apple so we could prime all our apps for M1 before launch and get them up and running natively on the new hardware, making Affinity apps the first professional creative applications to offer native M1 support.

Affinity 1.8

With our apps now primed for this transition, Mac customers with M1 can expect a more responsive user experience with respect to painting, pixel editing, filter effects, document rendering and more. It also enables many more elements like adjustment layers and live filters to be maintained before performance suffers—allowing for a more non-destructive workflow, even on the most complex of documents.

To sum it up, M1 makes our apps run faster, smoother and feel more responsive than ever before (we’ve even seen speed increases of over 3x faster running on the new MacBook Air). It’s definitely a big step forward for Mac, and we can’t wait to see how the rest of the Mac range develops in the future.

New Affinity Designer Update

If you own the apps already, make sure you download the latest update today for free, otherwise head over to our homepage to learn more about our professional creative software.