![]() DxO PhotoLab 4 shows all edits you have made in chronological order so you easily can keep a track of what you have done previously. Thanks to DxO Advanced history I now have a better overview of what I have done in my workflow and can reset the actual edits I wish. Sometimes when I have been going a bit too far in my editing, I haven’t had any other option than going back separately or simply reset. DxO PhotoLab 4 – review DxO Advanced History You can either search/replace text in the files, add certain text before or after the original text of the file names and rename the files entirely. Using a smart workspace will save you time so you can spend more time on the fun part, editing your photos! Batch renamingĪre you about to send a collection of photos to a client and you need to edit the file names? Forget about changing the names on all the individual files, thanks to the new feature with batch renaming now you can easily do it on multiple files. There is also a new search field where you can type in the specific tool you are looking for instead of searching for it in the palettes. The tools are all categorized under Lights, Color, Detail, Geometry, Local adjustments, Creative and you can also activate a star that is visible next to all the tools and they will show up when you click on the star in the workspace menu. That’s why I’m happy that with the new DxO Smart Workspace, you can easily create your own customized workspace. When I was new to DxO Photolab I found it at times to be time-consuming to find the tools I needed, I already had my workflow I was used to in Lightroom and it took me some extra time to familiarize with the tool palette in Photolab. If you shoot in low light situations this feature will save the photos you thought were ruined due to high noise and bring back life to them.Īre you an astrophotographer? Or a landscape photographer who also enjoy capturing the stars in the sky or even the Milky Way? Then you will love DeepPRIME! DxO Smart Workspace As you can see DeepPrime has rendered the image perfectly, keeping the subject intact while reducing the noise remarkably. Before to the left and after to the right. In the photo below you can see a close-up of the same shot. With just one click in DxO Photolab 4, DeepPrime made some magic and I’m very pleased with the result. Instead, I increased the ISO, however, as you can see in the before photo is has lots of noise and doesn’t look very flattering to the eye. One example is an evening this summer when I saw a beautiful sunset from my balcony and didn’t have the time to use my tripod nor filters. It could be a milkyway, like the photo you can see in the beginning of this article or simply a sunset or sunrise when I’m not using any filters. It’s not very often that I shoot in low light situations, but it happens from time to time. ![]() It’s based on artificial intelligence technology that demosaics and denoises an image in one step resulting that the rendering of an image taken in low light with high ISO is as far as possible true to reality. Thanks to 15 years of analysis of millions of photos DxO has created DeepPRIME that delivers mindblowing result with its denoising technology.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |