![]() I wanted it to know if my flat histogram will be telling me the truth. And you can then make your own color profiles for applications, or check the RAW histogram against the in-camera histogram of the jpeg. And the application let you look at the RAW data histogram before any modifications by raw converters. There are alot of in depth writeups about how to examine the RAW data, with and without a color card. The reason I got it was so I could examine my RAW data. I have not used it yet, I got it ahead of a new camera. The full version lets you create color profiles. I bought the set, but not the full version of Rawdigger. There is usually one around holidays, 40% off or so. Heck, I'd have paid $15 or $20 just for the video tutorials and info on the FRV website. ![]() YMMV, of course, but that margin is worth the $15 or so I paid for it. ![]() I even prefer culling JPEGs in it before importing. The chief benefit to me is being able to use more effective previews when culling, and before I commit Lr to importing and making all those 1:1 previews I need. There are tutorials on the site on how to do it. If you use a mainstream raw converter like Lightroom Capture One, DxO, Affinity, ACDSee, etc, you don’t need to buy either one, as the alleged ‘gains’ would be marginal at best (I personally don’t think there are any gains, just extra steps to reach the same destination!).ĭo not complicate your life unless you have a compelling, clear reason for it.įRV is designed to work well with a Lr workflow. I cannot make up my mind if I should buy combination or just FRV.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |