![]() Like previous versions, it’s effectively a batch processing tool for raw files that applies DxO’s automatic lens corrections and noise reduction technologies to produce a new raw file in the DNG format that has all the extended dynamic range, color data and editability of regular raw files, but fully corrected and of a much higher quality. RW2 RAW file in Lightroom vs the same processed through PureRAW and output as a DNG. DxO PureRAW 3 does something rather clever. None of the images have had any colour corrections etc applied, it's just a straight imported. So these results are for illustrative and informative purposes only, I recommend your own testing if precision is an absolute requirement.įor simplicity and clarity I'll do each lens comparison as its own comment. As you can see, the default Lightroom processing leaves it looking pretty noisy. It was shot at ISO 18,000 on a Nikon D7200, so pretty optimistic, I’ll agree. ![]() My start shot in Lightroom Here’s the image I’m going to be working with. It is admittedly not at all a scientific process - I took photos of a test image on a computer screen, hand held, with no finely calibrated horizontal or vertical facing onto the screen. Here’s how to use DxO PureRAW in Lightroom: 1. However I've subseqeuntly done some experimentation, and there is actually a variance between the two lens correction models almost across the board, with no clear 'winner' as to who gets it most accurate. The biggest news regarding cameras is that DxO Photolab 5 now supports 18 Fujifilm cameras. When processing files with DXO PureRaw 2, Lightroom Classis 11.4.1 will send the processed file to a 'Collections' folder and a DXO folder in the original folder. There are 26 models in total, including the Canon EOS Ra, DJI Air 2S, Nikon Z FC, Olympus PEN E-P7, Panasonic GH5 II, Pentax K-3, and Sony ZV-E10. In my original case, the Lightroom profile was accurate, whereas the PureRAW one was notably pincushioned - this was using a GM5 and the PanaLeica 25mm f/1.4 gen1. DxO Photolab 5 supports a range of new cameras across the top brands. Per my comment in the DxO PureRAW thread, I noticed recently that the lens profiles embedded in Lightroom have notably different geometry to those utilised by PureRAW.
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