Nothing here is accurate, it's all subjective. You use say Adobe Standard profile, you get one rendering and a different rendering doing nothing else but picking a differing DCP profile. It has to be rendered into RGB and that's done based on the current settings. ![]() It seems like Adobe isn't accurately rendering the exposure on-screen and thus requiring additional adjustments.Īccurate' here. It is simply a preview with one, maybe close or close to ideal rendering or one that isn't anything like the ideal rendering. ![]() That camera JPEG is over-written in ACR/LR based on its current rendering settings and again, this has no bearing on the exposure of the raw. The JPEG preview from a raw is based on the exposure for that raw and if it looks 'ok', the likelihood is the raw is grossly under exposed. Normalize' the rendering for ideal raw exposure.ĥ. Which is why those of us shooting optimal raw exposures always have a custom default setting to ' An optimally exposed raw will nearly always look way, way to bright with the out of the boxĭefault settings. IF the default doesn't appear as you desire, make a custom default.Ĥ. It affects the brightness via rendering the raw along with lots of other sliders.ģ. 'under exposed' (actually not bright enough), a slider calledĮxposure doesn't affect exposure at all. The exposure is what it is, why LR might preview one raw from a camera differently than other isn't unusual (even from the same manufacturer).Īctual exposure of the raw data, no Adobe product gives you that data. It never shows you the actual raw which would look something like this: It is always rendering based on some setting the default out of the box or one you've made. What's important here is EVERYTHING you see in ACR or LR If you want to evaluate actual exposure, you need a tool like RawDigger to view a raw Histogram. You can adjust image brightness with the controls provided, but this has nothing to do with exposure (Exposure only takes place at image capture, the result of the amount of light striking the sensor so just Aperture and Shutter). ![]() The original picture is perfect if you opne it.You can't know anything about the exposure without viewing a raw Histogram and none exists in ACR or Lightroom. Up to now the thumbnails of my pictures looked good, but the thumbnails of pictures I processed and extorted to JPG with Capture One look a bit corrupted, very grainy, just asyou would lokk at 100% crop of a JPG tehat was stored with max. This was key to me, because beside handling the photos exported as JPGs I have to manage a couple of thousands graphical images in different languages for my work (going in documents, presentations, etc.)īTW a question to other XnViewMP users out there.
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