![]() I wanted to figure out why it seemed to be adding something to my "no correction" preset. So, I was tinkering around with DxO some more. ![]() You can also from here click on "Customize" and start applying changes to the RAW file that you can in-turn save as a preset similar to how Lightroom does it. You click on the Blue "Apply Preset" button to apply any presets (Which I didn't) that you have saved or apply any that came installed with the program. Maybe I am totally wrong about all this, but it suggests to me that DxO must still be applying some processing even with the standard preset turned off (because otherwise there is no image to display other than a pre-corrected preview version in the RAW file) & that the 'correct' exposure (& saturation & so on) is at least partially a matter of subjective preferences rather than any objective standard. So what does that blue "Apply Preset" button in your earlier screenshot do? (I don't have DxO or the like so I have no idea how that works.)Īlso, it could just be because the screenshots are JPEGs but while the DxO one is certainly brighter, it also seem to have blown out a lot of details, particularly noticeable in the white water, compared to the Affinity one.
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