![]() ![]() ![]() The colors are still ever so slightly brighter in C1P, and the shadows are a bit muddier or softer or something too… I’d try to do a bit more, but it’s late and there’s no need to try to get exactly the same image out of two different raw processors. That sounds ominous, but I decided to try anyway and loaded a couple of C-5050 dngs into DxO. But then I saw the note that DxO will work “with RAW files that have already been converted into DNG format, so long as the original RAW file is also supported by DxO OpticsPro.” That’s somewhat fewer cameras than C1P, which supports “more than 300” according to its rather outdated camera support page, but neither of them touch the C-5050Z.Ĭ1P will happily play around with the dng files that Lightroom (or Adobe’s DNG creator) creates from the ancient ORFs, and I assumed that DxO would too. Well, when you click it, *poof* sliders at last.Īnyway, the negative conversion went more or less without a hitch, except for the lack of flip. So let’s skip right to the Negative Conversion…Īfter getting the white balance close with Red Green and Blue tone curves (it wasn’t easy-I spotted a tiny little ‘+’ in the lower right hand corner of the White Balance panel. So this will be a bit different than the other reviews, a bit more perfunctory, in many respects. Metcalf, once I found that there was no way to flip an image in DxO,** I knew it wasn’t going to be useful for me long term, and so I decided to just have some fun. With apologies to the developers and to Dr. If you’d like to see a bit more, including a 2 hour shoot-out between DxO and C1P, read on… I’ll give you my first thoughts right up front: 1) DxO is capable of rendering fine details in ways that other programs simply can’t* and 2) the omission of a flip option renders it useless to me, given that I scan film from the emulsion side and therefore require a flip to get things back right again. Much like C1P, I had no intention to test DxO, and much like C1P, I’m glad I did. Much thanks to Franz Metcalf for his comment on the Capture One review and encouragement to test out DxO. Installation: usual dmg & drag to applications folder. (See here for differences between additions.) Prices: Essential: $129 Elite $199 add $79 for the View Point plugin to add the geometric corrections that DxO is known for add an additional $129 for the DxO film pack… A suite of all three is available for $289 for the Elite or $189 for the Essential. The extension is capable of applying optical corrections, White Balance correction, DxO Smart Lighting, PRIME (and TNR) denoising and DxO ClearView haze removal, in a completely new user interface that is simple, clean and intuitive.Program: DxO Optics Pro (In 2017, with version 12, the name was changed to DXO PhotoLab.) DxO image processing for DxO ONE image files can now be accessed directly from the editing mode of OS X Photos, with DxO Connect acting as a 3rd-party extension. DxO OpticsPro for Photos - DxO ONE Camera Only is designed to provide a seamless image processing workflow for DxO ONE users who are on a Mac, and use OS X Photos as their primary photo application. ![]()
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