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5 reasons why Retrospecs is our new favourite photo-editing app

Get your retro art on with this superb app for making photos party like it’s 1984

5 reasons why Retrospecs is our new favourite photo-editing app

5 reasons why Retrospecs is our new favourite photo-editing app

Retrospecs wants to hurl you back to a halcyon age, so your iPhone can pretend it’s a ZX Spectrum. It’s a master of retro art, able to accurately ape a staggering range of systems, along with dithering styles that were popular in the day. So if you ever wanted to find out what your face would look like as reimagined on a Commodore PET, or how your neighbourhood would appear if your brain interpreted the world as a giant Game Boy, this is your app.

1) It's bags of fun

1) It’s bags of fun

From the off – and especially if you’re of a certain vintage yourself – Retrospecs is grin-inducing fun. You can load an image or take a photo and sit in a kind of nostalgic haze, flicking between well-known systems and outputs (C64; Amiga; NES; Game Boy; Teletext) to niche fare. (Thomson TO7? Nope. Us neither.)

2) It works with video

2) It works with video

Usefully, a Levels tab enables you to fine-tune your original image’s saturation, brightness and contrast, so it works perfectly for whatever virtual system you’re hammering it into. Then you can pop to the Options tab and attack your miniature retro masterpiece with noise, image corruption, scan-lines, and the kind of phosphor glow/chroma shift that makes you pine for CRT. Many of these effects and styles look even better when applied to imported video. If you’re sick of super-crisp iPhone footage, you can mash it into a kind of vibrant glitch-fest.

3) You can make your own emulator

3) You can make your own emulator

As if that’s not enough, Retrospecs invites you to fully unlock your inner nerd by devising your own retro systems. That’s right: if everything Commodore, Nintendo, Sega, Atari, and all the others, once sent your way isn’t good enough for your pixel-art loving sensibilities, you can fashion your own emulation from the engines, palettes and screen sizes on offer.

4) It's been lovingly made

4) It’s been lovingly made

This level of attention to detail, apparent throughout the app, propels Retrospecs beyond typical filter fare. Sure, other apps with a tap can transform photos into something that might have graced a screen in a 1980s bedroom. But Retrospecs feels like a labour of love – a fitting, respectful tribute to the graphics of a bygone age.

5) There's no limit on your creativity

5) There’s no limit on your creativity

Most importantly, though, its many options allow you to be creative – it’s as much a box of toys as a set of filters. It’s this that makes Retrospecs more than just a nostalgia fix for greying old gamers, transforming it into a novel, capable, and entertaining filters app anyone can enjoy.