Direct posting to Facebook, Instagram, Twitter & Tumbrl from mobile devices.The ability to use hi-res images for top-quality results.Easy-to-use slider controls to adjust color details, wet edges, paper styles, and water colors.Thousands of watercolor styles by simply adjusting the settings and combining color, washes and blooms.The ability to create and save custom presets styles.Loads of ‘Styles’ to get you started fast.Two professional-quality aquamedia styles: A traditional one applies fluid brush strokes and colorful washes and a two toned one washes your image with soft color combinations.
AQUARELLA LOGO PROFESSIONAL
You will be thrilled when you see your newly rendered watercolor - Auquarella is a professional artistic app and will deliver a high-end watercolor result true to the original media. Look closely as you render your aquamedia to discover light delicate “blooms” of wet color running throughout your creation and brush strokes of overlapping pigment dried dark along the edges. Watch as Aquarella transforms your image into one with liquid pools of color blended fluidly on paper to create a watercolor with all the delicate details found in a traditional watercolor media. As George (on "Seinfeld") once said, "The sea was angry that day, my friend" and now we have witnessed the anger for ourselves.Watercolor, or Aquarella is a wonderful transparent and luminous artistic media. Filmed at 94 frames per second (rather than industry norm of 24 or 48), the visuals are truly breathtaking. It's one best enjoyed with theatre screen and sound, and a film that will likely lose something even on the finest home systems. Waves, glaciers, whales and dolphins combine for an unusual cinematic experience, and the most staggering sound comes courtesy of the ice moaning and water running. and even a swimming horse is photographed underwater. A sailboat captain fighting a storm might be followed by a breath-taking waterfall, which might be followed by a flooded town. Filmed in Greenland, Venezuela, Siberia (Lake Baikal), and Miami, Florida, where we see the effect of Hurricane Irma, water is shown in its glory. Kossakovsky allows the camera and nature to show the story, albeit with periodic musical accompaniment from composer Eicca Toppinen - sometimes with heavy metal chords, sometimes with soothing strings. Perhaps Morgan Freeman signed a non-compete with the penguins. So we brace ourselves for another lecture on climate change. When another mishap occurs, we realize the tragedy is blamed on ice that has melted "3 weeks" earlier than usual. Other cars speed across the frozen body of water as if it's a sport or thrill for the driver.
When the camera finally does pull back, we see the vast space of the lake covered in ice. The film begins with a rescue team working frantically to pull out a car that has fallen through the ice. In fact, water takes many forms, and Russian filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky serves up some stunning water photography from around the globe. It's more like Mother Nature giving us a glimpse at her most beautiful, peaceful, ferocious and terrifying self. This is not your father's Nature documentary.