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PhotoLab’s shadow and highlight recover is effective, but feels very complicated compared to the others.
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#SILKYPIX DEVELOPER STUDIO SE VERSUS SILKYPIX PRO MANUAL#
There are also manual Selective Tone adjusters for manual control but it’s not clear either how these interact with the other two.
#SILKYPIX DEVELOPER STUDIO SE VERSUS SILKYPIX PRO HOW TO#
PhotoLab complicates things with Exposure Compensation and Smart Lighting tools which interact to automatically optimise the image’s tonal range, but it’s not always clear what the program is doing and how to affect it manually. All three of these programs offer shadow and highlight recovery tools, but Capture One’s High Dynamic Range tools are probably the simplest and most obvious to use, though Lightroom’s shadow and highlight recovery is straightforward and effective too. One of the big reasons for shooting RAW files over JPEGs is the ability to recover blown highlights and bring up dense shadow detail.
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There are no Fujifilm cameras in this comparison.
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What this comparison is mostly about is just how good each one of them is at processing RAW images, and to test this out I’m going to use compare the RAW image processing of files from a series different cameras, including a Canon EOS 6D Mark II, Sony A6000, Nikon Z 6 and Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark II.