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Mr Photo 1.5 Instant

But remains the high-water mark. Today, abandonware forums keep it alive. Vintage computing enthusiasts run it in Windows 95 virtual machines, marveling at its speed and sincerity.

For anyone who first removed red-eye in 1997, heard that soft “thump” of the clone stamp, and printed a slightly-too-dark 4x6 on an inkjet that cost $1.50 per page—Mr. Photo 1.5 wasn’t software. It was a darkroom they could finally afford to enter. mr photo 1.5

The final version, Mr. Photo 4.0 (2003), was a buggy, bloated mess. The company was acquired by a larger software conglomerate in 2005, and the brand was quietly retired. But remains the high-water mark

Then came .

4.5/5 Rating (today): 3/5 for features, 5/5 for nostalgia, 5/5 for soul. “Every picture tells a story. Mr. Photo helps you tell it better.” — Box tagline, 1997 For anyone who first removed red-eye in 1997,

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But remains the high-water mark. Today, abandonware forums keep it alive. Vintage computing enthusiasts run it in Windows 95 virtual machines, marveling at its speed and sincerity.

For anyone who first removed red-eye in 1997, heard that soft “thump” of the clone stamp, and printed a slightly-too-dark 4x6 on an inkjet that cost $1.50 per page—Mr. Photo 1.5 wasn’t software. It was a darkroom they could finally afford to enter.

The final version, Mr. Photo 4.0 (2003), was a buggy, bloated mess. The company was acquired by a larger software conglomerate in 2005, and the brand was quietly retired.

Then came .

4.5/5 Rating (today): 3/5 for features, 5/5 for nostalgia, 5/5 for soul. “Every picture tells a story. Mr. Photo helps you tell it better.” — Box tagline, 1997