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Adobe Photoshop On the Web Will be Free to Everyone

The browser-based version of this popular photo editor will include its core features.

Adobe Photoshop on web promotional image
Adobe Photoshop on web
Image: Adobe

Adobe Photoshop will soon be free to all users as a basic web-based version of the full photo editing app. This free edition is currently being trialed in Canada, where users can access Photoshop from a web address so long as they are logged into a free Adobe account, The Verge reports.

This stripped-down, browser version of the popular photo editor will give more users access to the core features of Photoshop. When the web version launched to subscribers in October, it was positioned as a collaboration tool for artists to share an image with others so they could make small edits or add annotations. Adobe has since expanded its functionality and added the ability to create a new document from the web instead of having to upload one from the full desktop app.

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Adobe Photoshop on web promotional image
Adobe Photoshop on web
Image: Adobe
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With the move to a free model, Adobe is attempting to widen its net by giving everyday consumers access to a simplified version of its app. If it goes to plan, people will get a taste of what can be achieved in Photoshop—though not enough for them to rely entirely on the web version—so they can eventually upgrade to a subscription. Since launching the web app last year, Adobe has added several tools, including refine edge, curves, dodge and burn, and Smart Objects conversion.

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Expanding the Photoshop user base also means bringing it to less capable systems, including Chromebooks. One of the major downsides of using a Chrome OS-based laptop over a Windows system is the lack of Adobe apps, including Photoshop. With a web version, everyone can access Photoshop from any device, including the millions of students using Chromebooks.

“I want to see Photoshop meet users where they’re at now,” Maria Yap, VP of digital imaging at Adobe, told The Verge. “You don’t need a high-end machine to come into Photoshop.”

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Photoshop is widely regarded as the industry standard for photo editing, but this powerful tool is also an expensive one. The cheapest plan starts at $10/month for 20GB of cloud storage, which prices out less established photo editors and everyday consumers. I know several people who rely on a free browser-based photo editing software, like PhotoPea or Pixlr, to save a buck. I personally use Affinity Photo because its one-time $55 price prevents me from adding another subscription to my credit card statement.

Adobe hasn’t yet said when the web-based version of Photoshop would be made available to a wider audience. But the company clearly knows what it means to give the first hit out for free.