I did that and it worked fairly well for some images, but not so much for others. And there’s also thorough instructions in the RawPedia for how to create a custom camera profile with Adobe’s DNG profile creator: purely a benefit of the whole Open Source thing.There’s also a preset in the film simulations that, on advice of the RawPedia, I didn’t try, but that I might one day.I messed around with them all, more or less, and just… MashaAllah. Check it! Two tone curves! And they both have multiple options: Linear, Custom, Parametric, and Control Cage curve types Standard, Weighted-Standard, Film-Like, and Saturation and value blending.But RawTherapee offers three or four things that other apps don’t. Negative Conversion works easy, just a simple tone curve swap. RawTherapee handled everything I threw at it, and every time it threw me for a loop, the RawPedia stepped in to save the day. There is a snapshot function as well, but it also resets when you navigate to another image. Īnd that’s about all I have in the way of complaints. Once you navigate to another image, the history resets. The history window doesn’t remember… well, I guess it does, but only while you’re working on the image. Not before this Raw converter testing thing ends, and not before I finish up that 47 year old roll of Ansco and put it through the R3 Monobath Developer that’s currently languishing in the film developing cupboard. Of course, that would necessitate a redesign of the Scan-O-Matic 7000… maybe it’s time for a mark IV? The other option would be to get closer… not only would I get more pixels of negative to push around, I’d also get higher resolution. There are a relatively large number of these simulations, and unlike similar Lightroom plugins, Film Simulation in RawTherapee is built-in and free.
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