![]() are inevitable no matter what you’re shooting with, but they can be subtle. Problems like lens softness, optical distortion, etc. …followed by OpticsPro 11’s automatic correction. Uncorrected rendering of raw file from Olympus E-M1… William Porter I am pretty sure some new users work with OpticsPro for a while before they realize that the app is making significant improvements to their photos before they’ve touched a single slider. ![]() The basic corrections are applied the instant you open an image in OpticsPro. Adobe Lightroom also has an optical corrections feature but Lightroom’s modules are much more limited-for example, there are no modules at all for lenses from Olympus.Īmazingly, you don’t have to do a thing. I’ve worked for years with OpticsPro while shooting Pentax, Sony, Olympus, Canon, Nikon, and Panasonic cameras and scores of lenses, and the software has very seldom lacked a module that I needed. OpticsPro automatically downloads the modules that you need.ĭxO Labs haven’t generated modules for every conceivable pairing of body and lens, but they have tested over 300 cameras and over 950 lenses, resulting in over 30,000 camera-lens correction modules. OpticsPro’s not-so-secret weapon is its extensive library of corrections based on research by DxO Labs into the technical properties of tens of thousands of camera-and-lens combinations. If I switch to the more expensive Olympus 60mm f2.8 macro lens on either body, the pertinent modules will recommend to OpticsPro a slightly different set of corrections. If I use the same Sigma lens on a Panasonic body, OpticsPro knows to apply a subtly different set of corrections required by the different sensor. For example, if I load an image taken with the Olympus O-MD E-M1 and the Sigma 60mm f2.8 lens, OpticsPro’s module for that body-lens pairing tells it just what flaws to look for and it applies corrections automatically. The results also serve as the basis of the individual camera-and-lens performance modules that enable OpticsPro to get the best initial rendering of every image. Automatic correction of these nearly inevitable problems is OpticsPro’s superpower.ĭxO is highly respected for its rigorous scientific testing of cameras (sensors) and lenses, and it makes its performance results publicly available atĭ. ![]() What’s new in version 11 is less important than what is not new: its ability to automatically correct images for lens-based problems (optical distortion, softness, chromatic aberration, and vignetting) and sensor-based problems (noise especially but also basic color and exposure). (Prime 2016 is only available in the OpticsPro 11 Elite Edition.) Prime noise reduction in version 10 could easily take a couple of minutes to process a single image Prime 2016 in version 11 does a better job in about a quarter of the time. I’ll take their word on that but there’s no doubt that it’s dramatically faster-er, less slow. DxO claims that the latter-renamed Prime 2016-is more effective than it used to be. OpticsPro’s standard noise reduction has always been good and the advanced Prime noise reduction has been great. And there’s finally an automatic fix for red-eye. Version 11 also adds an automatic micro-contrast tool that boosts contrast for small details but is smart enough to ignore skin pores and noise. OpticsPro 11’s full-screen viewing, with the delightful before-and-after slider and with controls for rating images, is my favorite new feature. OpticsPro 11’s spot-weighted Smart Lighting didn’t automatically identify a face in this photo, so I drew a rectangle to indicate the area where I wanted the Smart Lighting to focus. Even if there’s no face in the photo, you can draw one or more spot-weighted rectangles in the image yourself and OpticsPro will adjust the light and dark areas of the photo accordingly.īright sun in west Texas cast a strong shadow on my wife’s face. If you used fill light while taking the photo, OpticsPro is smart enough to know that it doesn’t need to do anything. OpticsPro will find the face, recognize the strong backlight, and then automatically try to brighten the face and balance the backlight. For example, take a shot of an informal portrait of someone standing in front of a window at midday, using your camera’s matrix metering system for the best overall exposure. OpticsPro 11’s Smart Lighting feature now has a spot-weighted option that’s more powerful and more versatile than using spot metering in your camera. Though it’s a modest upgrade, DxO continues to provide innovative and technically superior solutions to basic photographic problems. OpticsPro, its image processing and editing app for the Mac to version 11.
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