The circled box on the right used to be set 'Selected' as default. When you open an image, the geometry correction shows you the correction but includes the 'warped' bits it's going to cut off if you want it to. Performing before/after comparisons at all stages of correction, for example, to find the most appropriate settings for a particular tool or combination of tools. Which ever one you import I think internally DXO PhotoLab adopts. Most TIFF’s are 8 or 16-bit and JPEG’s are 8-bpc. That is what Adobe uses and I assume most RAW converters use a container space of sorts, that is 16-bpc, while most RAW files are 12 or 14-bpc. Enabling comparison between one image to another by comparing histories. How many bits does DXO Photo Lab use internally for colours I would think its 16-bpc. The soft proofing palette already features the unique ‘Preserve color details’ slider which protects color detail in highly saturated parts of the image when moving to smaller color spaces. Use Depending on the user, the history has a number of uses: Listing all corrections of all images for reference. The latest version of PhotoLab has change a default setting that threw me for a bit. DxO PhotoLab 6.3 introduces easy-to-use paper and ink simulations when soft proofing, ensuring that prints are as accurate as possible. DxO PhotoLab offers a set of 30 full presets divided into eight categories: General use. The different categories of available presets. You can choose a different preset as the default if desired. to either send a jpeg to a website or email, or a tiff for printing, etc. So for the Shoveler duck there a about 40 other wing-flap angles I might want to play with later, so I have a Preset called Duck. As soon as you open an image in DxO PhotoLab, the default full preset DxO Standard is automatically applied. Heres a thread for any questions on how to get started with DxO PhotoLab. I guess all RAW convertors can save the correction settings as a preset which can be applied to another image or a folder of images. The 'corrections' live as a side car, so if I want to print that image as maybe a 30x20, I'll reopen said image and save as a full-size TIFF into PShop. Choose the NEF I want, make it look spectacular and save as a 1920 pixel long axis JPEG onto my desktop and Post to P.net. Though it appears that there are now more and better options to export from PhotoLab.įor something like Nikon Wednesday, I'll probably open an image folder (or straight off the card) in PLab. The creators behind the JPEG XL file format promises more efficient compression without the loss of any visual quality, which should cut down on both the cost and space required to store images. But starting processing in PhotoLab and finishing in photoshop is a much bigger pain JPEG XL image format promises smaller files, backwards compatibility and more.
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