kamilsukun Posted November 6, 2006 Share #1 Posted November 6, 2006 Advertisement (gone after registration) What is the best RAW converter for D2? SilverFast or Capture 1? Or, is Adobe Raw Converter enough? I wonder if anyone found a chance to compare. Regards, Kamil Sukun Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted November 6, 2006 Posted November 6, 2006 Hi kamilsukun, Take a look here The Best Raw Converter for D2. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
robert_parker Posted November 6, 2006 Share #2 Posted November 6, 2006 Kamil Try http://www.leica-camera-user.com/digital-forum/8775-capture-1-sharpening.html http://www.leica-camera-user.com/digital-forum/8777-d-lux-3-software-bundle.html for starters - there's a lot of information about on the forum Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
cboudier Posted November 6, 2006 Share #3 Posted November 6, 2006 C1 does not recognise D2 Lightroom and Raw Shooter (Premium or Essential) do a very good job with the D2. Silkypix and Lightzone are also working fine. Of course, Photoshop (CS or Elements) works fine too. Best solution for you is to try and choose according to your taste, because the results and the ergonomics are different. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
cbretteville Posted November 6, 2006 Share #4 Posted November 6, 2006 Rawshooter premium, no contest IMHO. I'm really hoping that enough of RSP carries over to Lightroom that it makes a difference over what you get out of D2 files with ACR. - Carl Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
spylaw4 Posted November 7, 2006 Share #5 Posted November 7, 2006 Depends on whether you are on PC or Mac, AFAIK Rawshooter is PC only. A number of the allegedly better converters are not usable on Mac. Personally I have no problem with Lightroom, at least until C1 is able to handle D2 or even D3! I have also tried RAW developer but there are some difficulties in ease of use IMO. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest stnami Posted November 7, 2006 Share #6 Posted November 7, 2006 Raw Developer does justice to the D2 colour rendition especially the warm tones. If you have time and don't mind listening to good music and viewing a screen its great. If you are impatient buy another camera Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
petermcwerner Posted November 7, 2006 Share #7 Posted November 7, 2006 Advertisement (gone after registration) Raw Developer does justice to the D2 colour rendition especially the warm tones. If you have time and don't mind listening to good music and viewing a screen its great. If you are impatient buy another cameraSilkypix does a very good job - IMHO much better than Photoshop - and is quite fast Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest stnami Posted November 7, 2006 Share #8 Posted November 7, 2006 The advantage of Raw Developer (mac only) over photoshop and the others is the curves are available in LAB colour space, thus we can separate luminousity from colour with ease Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
spylaw4 Posted November 7, 2006 Share #9 Posted November 7, 2006 Raw Developer does justice to the D2 colour rendition especially the warm tones. If you have time and don't mind listening to good music and viewing a screen its great. If you are impatient buy another camera It's not that slow - but it annoys me that it won't provide a set of thumbnails from the shoot. You have to make them from the jpegs and then it will give you an index of thumbs to work from. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest stnami Posted November 7, 2006 Share #10 Posted November 7, 2006 ... yes it is when I use it.... .....then I am in no hurry and enjoy and drift with the images as they entice me into their visual game ps great for colour conversions to B&W Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
gennfiks Posted November 7, 2006 Share #11 Posted November 7, 2006 Hi, just my 5 cents worth of oppinion. I was using Raw Shooter Professional until I descovered SilkyPix and I find it much more superior (subjective oppinion) to the former and much more natural-like as far as the results are concerned. I detected in RSP even when "No Sharpening" was applied a strong edge definition which made images much more 3D-like, but more artificial-looking. That's when I discoverd Silkypix. The only thing that is desirable for this SW package is a good English manual. In some forums people are talking about the existance, and I checked it was true, in Amazon.jp of one book (in japanese) about the use of Silkypix. Unfortunately noone translated it yet. Cheers Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
kamilsukun Posted November 7, 2006 Author Share #12 Posted November 7, 2006 Robert, Christophe, Carl, Brian, Stanami, Peter, Gennady, Thank you all for very useful information. It is most kind of you. Regards, Kamil Sukun Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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