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Rawtherapee vs darktable11/9/2023 Halos especially are a personal bug-bear of mine, where the sky above the horizon line brightens and (worse) the mountains below the horizon line darken. But there are pretty substantial differences in denoising, haloing, and detail retention of the shadows specifically. Overall, most of these renderings turned out fine. Works very well in this image Zoner Photo Studioįujifilm X-T2 with XF70-300 231mm 1/400s f/5.7 ISO200 There does not seem to be a clarity-like slider? Exposure X7 Pleasant rendering, but not very detailed Highlights tend to blow to pure white somehow RawTherapeeĭehaze produces hue shift that is hard to fixĭoes not hide cropped-out image? Silkypix Developer Tends to strong halos from clarity ON1 Photo RAW Outstandingly subtle rendering to my eye DxO PhotoLabĭehaze ("ClearView") produces strong hue shiftĬontrast not enough editing range, added tone curve to helpĭenoise ("DeepPrime") annoyingly only visible in mini viewer Lightroom Classicĭenoise not very effective and slightly wormy Very little default saturation, easy to fix Very little dehaze used, as higher settings break tonality Very inefficient/smeary denoising Capture One This is especially tricky since color shifts in highlights are often baked deeply into the programs' color science, and hard to get rid off where they're unwanted.Īnyway, to my eyes, the only fire-like renderings here come from Capture One, Darktable v5, PhotoLab, and Lightroom. However, there's a flip side to this: Every program that renders yellow highlights in fire, does the same for overexposed skin, twists overexposed skies cyan, and red flowers magenta. ACDSee and ON1 probably take the yellow a bit too far. You can see Darktable v6, DxO PhotoLab, RawTherapee, Exposure, and Zoner leaning towards desaturation, while the others render yellow color twists of some form or another. So a balance has to be struck between merely desaturating highlights, and twisting them yellow. There's a difficult tradeoff to be made here: Fire highlights physically don't change hue much compared to the fire body, but we visibly expect "hotter" fire to twist yellow. Raising shadows turns background off-black Zoner Photo Studioįujifilm X-Pro2 with XF35mmF1.4 R 1/1000s f/2.2 ISO400 Shadows slider not strong enough to show pan Exposure X7 Highlights turn yellow, but lose all definition Pan immediately visible without adjustments RawTherapee Tone EQ very unusual re: shadows/blacks sliders DxO PhotoLab Tone EQ very unusual re: shadows/blacks sliders Darktable (filmic v5)įilmic v5, zero latitude, no color preservation Shadows adjusts unusally far into midtones Darktable (filmic v6)įilmic v6, zero latitude, no color preservation Highlights turn strongly yellow Capture One Regardless, my comparison is probably less scientific than last time, because my brain sort of broke after staring at too many renderings of the same images for too long. I tried to inject some objectivity by limiting my edits to the most obvious sliders wherever possible, especially in the programs I know better. Of course I am no expert in any of them except Darktable and Capture One, so my results are probably flawed. In order to put them through their paces, I took a random smattering of images from the last few years that I found difficult to work with for one reason or another, and checked how each of the programs dealt with them. I also installed Luminar Neo (€120 or €80/a) and Radiant Photo (€140) but I disliked them so immediately and viscerally that I didn't include them in the comparison below. Or maybe I just wanted a justification for buying DxO PhotoLab, because people on the internet speak so well of it □.įor the following comparison I downloaded trial versions of ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate 2023 (€155), Capture One 22 (€350 or €220/a), Darktable 4.0 (free), DxO Photolab 6 (€220 + €140 for FilmPack 6 + €99 for ViewPoint), Adobe Lightroom Classic 11.5 (€142/a), ON1 Photo Raw 2023 (€126), RawTherapee 5.8 (free), Silkypix Developer Studio Pro 11 (€155), Exposure X7 (€165), and Zoner Photo Studio X Fall 2022 (€60/a). This comes at an inopportune time, as I feel restless of late. It's that time of the year again when all image editing programs come out with new versions.
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