I’m a software developer and an amateur photographer. Last year I bought a Fujifilm X-T5 and started shooting SOOC JPEGs, but I’ve always found it difficult to understand what settings other people use or to edit photos quickly while traveling.
So, in my free time, I decided to build something that could be useful both for me and others.
That’s how I created photo.recipes
— a collection of small, fast, browser-based tools designed to help photographers analyze and tweak their images on the go. It’s completely free to use, with no ads or tracking — I built it simply because I wanted it to exist.
Some of the tools:
Analyzer – extracts EXIF data and shows the in-camera settings used, so you can replicate them.
Presets – finds the most similar Fujifilm film simulation for a given photo.
I’ve shared it with a few photographer friends and got great feedback, so I wanted to share it here too. I built the first version in about a month and I’m adding new features weekly — like a growing database of lenses or the PWA.
Would love to hear your feedback, ideas, or critiques — especially from people who care about both photography and tools that “just work.”
"Unfortunately, it is not Stripes’ policy to provide detailed feedback for interviews."
That's totally ok, I just think that a good company should give honest feedback to people to understand where to improve or if the decision to not go forward was based on other criteria.
No, because the infected trees wood is crap and falls apart, it can't be used to make wood items or wooden stuff sadly :(
And yes, the tree wood of healthy plants is amazing.
I'm Italian and I come from Puglia. It strikes me directly. It's a hard punch in the stomach, problem is that people don't want to remove this old trees, they are even centuries old and so they make the disease spread more and more as time progress and as a matter of fact the olive oil selling is their only income.
The state failed, they had no direct order to remove the trees nor economical help.
As an example in my father field where we grow olive oil trees, there are few that has this disease, but my father hasn't removed them, it's a cost we can't afford.
Now put a lot of ignorant agriculturist old men without money that have has the only source of income selling olive oil in front of this disease and you get the results.
I’m a software developer and an amateur photographer. Last year I bought a Fujifilm X-T5 and started shooting SOOC JPEGs, but I’ve always found it difficult to understand what settings other people use or to edit photos quickly while traveling.
So, in my free time, I decided to build something that could be useful both for me and others.
That’s how I created photo.recipes — a collection of small, fast, browser-based tools designed to help photographers analyze and tweak their images on the go. It’s completely free to use, with no ads or tracking — I built it simply because I wanted it to exist.
Some of the tools:
Analyzer – extracts EXIF data and shows the in-camera settings used, so you can replicate them.
Presets – finds the most similar Fujifilm film simulation for a given photo.
https://photo.recipes/recipes – apply film recipes directly to your images.
https://photo.recipes/frame – add clean frames before sharing online.
https://photo.recipes/tags – suggests relevant hashtags for social media.
I also made a PWA at https://pwa.photo.recipes so it's easier to use on the phone.
I’ve shared it with a few photographer friends and got great feedback, so I wanted to share it here too. I built the first version in about a month and I’m adding new features weekly — like a growing database of lenses or the PWA.
Would love to hear your feedback, ideas, or critiques — especially from people who care about both photography and tools that “just work.”
Thanks :)