07-03-2017 03:15 PM - edited 07-03-2017 03:31 PM
I upraded from DPP3 to DPP4. (4.6.10.0)
I was stuggling with the shadow areas of the photo's I processed.
There was no detail in the shadows, it was pure black.
Today I opened an old image and exported it with the same settings, and discovered that DPP4 is displaying AND EXPORTING Adobe RGB all wrong. It's a mess!
When changing to sRGB colors are ok, but when choosing any other profile the contrast increases, like the top and bottom of the spectrum are cut off. But it should not change at all!! Just like when converting to another profile in Photoshop.
Am I missing something here or what the..?
Attached are two screenshots of the DPP2/3 (top) and the DPP4 (bottom) version, as seen in Photoshop.
Note how the DPP4 version has lost all detail in the shadow areas.
Settings where the same for both exports. (defaults)
Also note the histogram that also shows that the actual file is different and it is not my color settings.
So I guess it's back to DPP3 again until this incredible bug - that for some mysterious reason has not been mentioned anywhere before - is fixed.
Sorry for my frustration but I recently also was blown away by a totally messed up 'saturation' slider on the Adobe side, that also nobody seemed to notice (Lumetri saturation in Premiere Pro). Adobe raw colors are also horrible and that's I why I use DPP.
I hope I am missing out on some checkbox or something that solves the problem.
05-28-2020 08:35 PM - edited 05-28-2020 08:48 PM
Hi Skies,
Finally I found someone who notice the same bug!
I also noticed in DDP4 (v.4.12.20.03, Mac OSX) that SRGB color tend to green/yellow what a i don't like, but still I see more information on whites and blacks than in adobeRGB.
I use a canon 6D.
So finally, the best workaround would be changing any color value (0.1 for example) and then make other adjustments?
05-29-2020 09:08 AM
@font wrote:
So finally, the best workaround would be changing any color value (0.1 for example) and then make other adjustments?
Yes, that's what I have been doing.
But Ive since switched to DxO Photolab, which, with the right camera/film profiles can produce very impressive results. Some photo's still look better in DPP though 😉
I also still use DPP for viewing and selecting since Photolab isn't exacly fast in that regard.
07-05-2017 07:53 AM
@Skies wrote:Ah ok, I'll see if I can sent a bugreport somwhere for DPP (because I am convinced it is a bug).
I've worked with DPP for over 10 years and this never happened before.
It also looks like any adjustments to raw files saved with DPP3 are not recognized by DPP4.
The auto gamma does something similar as auto levels in Photoshop.
And it does not solve the problem (more the opposite actually).
I always set everyting manually 😉
I don't think there's any bug You probably have DPP 3 configured to display all images in sRGB on your computer terminal and DPP 4 configured to display them in their native form. By default, an Adobe RGB image will display incorrectly on an sRGB device. But DPP lets you correct for that and display all images in sRGB. I suspect that you have that option configured differently in DPP 3 and DPP 4.
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