Artsy photo app Vinci from Russian social site VK is now available on Windows phone (8.1 and 10 Mobile). Vinci was released for iOS and Android on July 28 and quickly became one of the top apps in Russia. Now, the same app and features are available for Windows phone users as well.

If your social stream is filled with artsy-looking photos, it may be due to the rise of Prisma, which came to iOS and later Android (there's no sign of it coming to Windows phone despite some earlier confusion). Prisma takes your existing photos and applies non-traditional filters based on various art styles. The process is similar to rotoscoping minus the manual labor intensive process.

Vinci is in the same chic, however, what makes it neat is that it gets help from "neural networks" and is based on recent research cited in "Texture Networks: Feed-forward Synthesis of Textures and Stylized Images". The excerpt from the paper reads:

Gatys et al. recently demonstrated that deep networks can generate beautiful textures and stylized images from a single texture example. However, their methods requires a slow and memory-consuming optimization process. We propose here an alternative approach that moves the computational burden to a learning stage. Given a single example of a texture, our approach trains compact feed-forward convolutional networks to generate multiple samples of the same texture of arbitrary size and to transfer artistic style from a given image to any other image. The resulting networks are remarkably light-weight and can generate textures of quality comparable to Gatys et al., but hundreds of times faster. More generally, our approach highlights the power and flexibility of generative feed-forward models trained with complex and expressive loss functions.

To put that in English Vinci is fast.

In fact, it's nearly instant at around 2 seconds per filter to apply. For comparison, Prisma on iOS running on the iPhone 6s can take between 4 and 9 seconds per filter. While that may not seem a lot in reality when you are shifting through each filter to see which looks the best, it is draining to use Prisma (the Android app is no better, and maybe even worse).