PaintShop Pro (PSP) is a raster and vector graphics editor for Microsoft Windows. It was originally published by Jasc Software. In October 2004, Corel purchased Jasc Software and the distribution rights to PaintShop Pro. PSP functionality can be extended by Photoshop-compatible plugins.

From 2006 to 2011 (versions XI to X3), PaintShop Pro was marketed as "Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo". Having dropped the "Photo" part of the name in version X4, Paintshop Pro X5 was derived from Ulead Photo Explorer after Corel's acquisition of Ulead.[8]


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Adds face recognition, instant effects palette, graduate filter effect, Retro Lab, single RAW photo, run multiple scripts, Corel guide, photo mapping, support for Adobe Photoshop brushes, RAW/JPG pair filtering, 16-bit supported in 57 additional adjustments and effects, enhanced tools (text, crop, HDR, photo blend), Share My Trip on-line slide show creation[55]

Enjoy fun and uncomplicated painting software for beginners that will inspire you to experiment and fall in love with digital painting. Sketch, draw and paint away on a blank canvas using realistic brushes or dabble in exclusive image-based AI and cloning art. Enjoy a newly added extra brush pack.

Extend the power of PaintShop Pro with 64-bit third-party plugins including Adobe plugins or brushes, Topaz Labs, Nik Collection by DXO and so many more. Import PSD files and export to Photoshop to work effortlessly across platforms.

Okay, there are a fair amount of Paint Shop Pro users here and the references have piqued my interest. I just spent the entire weekend doing a clean installation of Windows XP, and since I still have to install my Photoshop plug-ins I'd like to try a version of PSP too since the plug-ins are mostly compatible.

Okay, there are a fair amount of Paint Shop Pro users here and the

references have piqued my interest. I just spent the entire

weekend doing a clean installation of Windows XP, and since I still

have to install my Photoshop plug-ins I'd like to try a version of

PSP too since the plug-ins are mostly compatible.

Jasc wanted Paint Shop Pro to be an affordable competitor to Photoshop, and - in many areas - it was. Corel is going for mass-market, down-market users, the people who want to open a shot, click one button, and have it magically fixed. To me, the one-button fixes in X and XI make my photos look worse 90% of the time. If giving your subjects a suntan with a one-button click, or scrap-booking, are more important to you than really controlling your image at more complex levels go for Corel. Otherwise the final Jasc version is probably as good as PSP will ever get.

PLUS, Corel Paint has also been very successful, and let's face it, when you come down to it, THAT's really just ANOTHER high end Photo editor with some extra painting features. PLUS, don't forget the 'editor for dummies' that replaced PhotoPaint V9 in the Essentials package.

Sinds begin februari heb ik een nieuwe laptop met Windows 11 en Ik had hier hetzelfde probleem, dat u beschrijft. In Windows 10 had ik met Paintshop pro 6 geen probleem. Nu heb ik de stappen ondernomen die u aangeeft in Windows 11. En ... het werkt. Fantastisch. Hier word ik echt blij van. Dus heel erg bedankt voor uw artikel.

I just found this page while asking questions about PSP 6 and up on Windows 10. I haven't upgraded to Windows 11 yet and not really wanting to as I've not heard good things about it. Anyway, will PSP 10 working smoothly and correctly with Windows 10 ? I really miss it and hate the Corel stuff. I was thinking about switching to Photoshop ( elements? ) but everything I've read doesn't tell me that I will be able to use all the .tub and .psp6 and up files that I have. 

Can someone please help? 

Thanks a million :)

Paint Shop Pro (PSP) is a bitmap graphics editor and vector graphics editor for computers running the Microsoft Windows operating system that was originally published by Minneapolis-based Jasc Software. In October 2004, Corel Corporation purchased Jasc Software, and with it, the distribution rights to Paint Shop Pro.


Originally called simply Paint Shop, the first version, 1.0, was released in early 1992. Paint Shop was originally distributed as shareware, but is now sold in the United States for US$99.99, or US$59.99 for an upgrade from version 7 or higher, which is considerably lower than the price of its main competition, Adobe Photoshop. International prices vary but there is always a price advantage over Photoshop.


Its functionality is easy to learn and its user base is large due to the fact that many mid-range scanners come with PSP as their acquisition tool and image editor and many OEM have been, or are, bundling it with their systems.


rom version 5.01 to version 9, Jasc bundled Animation Shop, an animated graphics editor, with Paint Shop Pro. Animation Shop is now available separately for US$40.


With version 8.0 of PSP Jasc made some major changes to PSP. The most obvious change was the new look of the program through the use of all new GUI elements. Version 8.0 also introduced the ability to control most elements of PSP via scripts or macros. Some changes, however, were not welcomed by all users. Some users complained that the time to start version 8.0 was tens of seconds, whereas the previous version started up in a few seconds. Some users also complained that the changes made to the brush and other tools rendered them much less precise than in the previous version. This has caused some users to stick with version 7.0 of the program. Version 9 later solved some of those issues.


Major changes in version 10 included a revamped Learning Center that helps new users to get started, Makeover Tools (Blemish Remover, Toothbrush/whitener, and Suntan Brush), IR film simulator, and a Black and White film converter that includes color filter effects. One of the most anticipated additions to version X was 48Bit (16bits per channel) color support, which unfortunately was not completely supported. In version X, 48bit color images were limited to a handful of digital image correcting features, but not full blown photo editing, where the real benefit could be realized. On the surface 48bit color is merely as good as 24bit color. However when the image is manipulated, 48bit color allows more precise color data to be maintained providing less image artifiacts after significant manipulation.


Since its eleventh version released in September 2006 the program bears the name "Corel Paint Shop Pro Photo XI". This has introduced a new "Organizer" that replaces the previous file browser and a number of new filters and effects. There have also been new "One-step photo fixes" introduced.


The versions listed below are all trial versions and intended for research purposes only.

We are adding support for transparency as well, including the ability to open and save transparent PNGs! When working with a single layer, you will notice a checkerboard pattern on the canvas indicating the portions of the image that are transparent. Erasing any content from the canvas now truly erases the content instead of painting the area white. When working with multiple layers, if you erase content on one layer, you will reveal the content in layers underneath.

Art Media is a new function that lets you paint over an image in a range of different painting styles (watercolour, acrylic, oil, etc.) It picks up the colour of the image underneath as you paint, allowing for a different creative approach to editing your images.

invested in her first DSLR back in 2007. While having many adventures out and about in the South Island of New Zealand, Stacey took to blogging about her experiences learning photography. Recently she discovered the fun and creative possibilities to be had with Photoshop. She can be found having an opinion all over the place here.

The one-time purchase options are a good fit for those who still resent Adobe's move to a subscription-only model for Photoshop, Lightroom, and Illustrator. For $9.99 per month, you get both Photoshop and Lightroom, but Illustrator starts at $19.99 per month if you prepay for a year. Photoshop Elements ($99), Adobe's consumer-level photo editing software, requires no subscription, but that software has more of a hobbyist feel, as opposed to the company's pro-level offerings.

Unlike in Adobe Photoshop Elements, which has a separate Organizer app, you do everything in PaintShop in the same window, but you switch between the Welcome, Manage, and Edit modes for different functions. Switching between these modes, however, isn't always instantaneous; performance here could stand improvement.

You can also save in Adobe PSD format (though you lose vector layers and other features), along with dozens of other standard image formats. If you open a PSD file created in Photoshop, layers are preserved, and you can edit them separately to taste. Afterward, your edits are fully editable if you open the resulting PSD in Photoshop. That means if you're working with someone who uses Photoshop, you're able to edit compatibly in PaintShop, but if you start in PaintShop, they only see a flattened version of your file.

By comparison, in Photoshop you must open raw files in Adobe Camera Raw utility before editing, though that tool itself offers a good many editing options. Corel's AfterShot option opens a whole new app, offering lighting, color, lens, noise, and geometry corrections, as well as the nifty Perfectly Clear tool, sort of like Lightroom's Clarity slider. For more on that option, read my AfterShot Pro review. In testing, PaintShop was able to open recent raw formats such as CR3 and raw files from a Canon EOS R7, a Fujifilm X-T4, a Nikon Z fc, and a Sony 7R IV.

Another gap is the lack of control over the effects. Sometimes you want to tone it down a bit, as I found with the Instant Film effect. Photoshop Elements' instant effects are indeed adjustable, but PaintShop's aren't. 2351a5e196

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