

“Landscape”), and you can mark your favorites.

There are so many presets that they’re overwhelming, but ReStyle breaks them down into collections (e.g. ReSyle comes with over 1000 presets and provides control / adjustment of the results that aren’t easily available in Photoshop. When you do this in Photoshop, you have to supply an image with the colors you’re trying to match. It seems like Photoshop’s “Image/Adjustments/Match Color” command. ReStyle maps color and tone statistics from a selected style to a target image. It’s interesting how remapping changed the color in the beach and rocks differently from the sky.ĭown on the beach at dawn (after Topaz ReStyle). Instead, it was easy to pick out this version from the grid displayed inside ReStyle. I could have separately adjusted the color balance on the sky and ground using layer masks in Photoshop or gradients in Lightroom. I had trouble with the white balance in this photo of Marineland beach at dawn. If you want to see the “before” versions, I’ve included them towards the end of the post. But I have used it a bit so I’ll try to introduce you to some possibilities with three examples I’ve played with.
Topaz restyle keeps crashing full#
This isn’t a full review or tutorial (I haven’t used it long enough for either of those).

You can download any of their products for a free thirty-day trial, so I thought I’d give it a go. Topaz released a new plug-in recently, called ReStyle.
