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Photo Editing Software I can buy outright

WJ_Big
Apprentice

I have an older copy of Photoshop Elements, which I usually find OK for cleaning up my photos. There are some shots, though, that I really want to make them extra nice, and I am falling short, and I'd like to upgrade my software.  I have a few friends who swear by Lightroom, but  I would much rather buy whatever package outright, and not be stuck with a subscription. Is there one choice of photo editing software that stands out above the rest that I can buy outright? 

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

Robegul
Contributor

As someone else said, everyone has their own preferences.   I would imagine it is very time consuming to try a bunch of these.  I set my criteria, and then picked one to try and liked it - so I cannot compare to the rest.

I chose DXO Photolab about a year ago, and really like it.   I used Canon DPP for awhile but found it VERY slow.  

I chose DXO Photolab because:

1. It is a one-time purchase (excluding periodic optional updates with new features)

2.  It has lens-specific correction data (sharpness, chromatic aberration, vignetting)  built in - just like Canon DPP

does.

3. It does not use a proprietary database to store your pics  - which drives me nuts.  It just stores the files on whatever drive, and in whatever folder you specify.

Good luck with the search!

Cheers

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11 REPLIES 11

WideAspect
Enthusiast

I wanted to add a couple of additional thoughts:

My expertise is more in the backend, post production. I worked for many years fixing / consulting with commercial photographers and filmmakers. Knowing what to do with a troubled digital image or 

Holding and shooting with a camera is a new thing to me, why I am here so much. 🙂

I have a policy, that for every time I ask a question in a forum (I'm involved with quite a few) I try and find a question that I can contribute to as well. Unfortunately, I am not that equipped in this forum to answer many camera / lens based questions.

I had not heard about DXO Photolab until it was mentioned in this forum. I spent sometime reading about it, they have a substantial amount of documentation on their website. I appreciate companies who like to talk about the idea of their software and not just their marketed features.

The unfortunate condition of being new to anything, is that at the time you need to make some longterm choices about tools ( software & hardware ) when at the same time, you have very little information to make those longterm decisions.

Money is certainly a legitimate concern but what might be far more important is the commitment of time and knowledge resources. Much of that can be applied in a template fashion to other aspects of learning other tools but much of it is not and then there is the further issue of that tool teaching a bias, a type of approach that may or may not be applicable in a general manner – and may constrict your future thinking.

I want to be clear, saying this now after mentioning DXO Photolab is not saying that their software is like this or would cause restricted thinking. Their specialty seems to be focused on RAW image development and they seem to have a fairly sophisticated approach that is well accepted.

In their forums there are negative comments but they are the kind of comments that do not indicate that the software is falling short of what it promises but that the users so like the software so much they want more. There is a lot of feature requests, many are outside the intention of the software: soft proofing, luminosity masks, etc. It is very mature software, they are currently celebrating they're 20th anniversary.

As Robegul indicates, DXO Photolab is about $300, a one time purchase + upgrades. It has all the features you would expect from a RAW development software.

In my own biases I viewed your question differently than as a best RAW viewer advice, as you mentioned it in the term "photo editing software that stands out above the rest that I can buy outright?"

Editing, at least to me, means something beyond RAW development. Affinity Photo has most anything you would need in RAW development, plus a few approaches I've not seen anywhere. But after you've developed your image, what's next? Besides all the things you would expect of a photo editing software they also have special modules: panorama stitching, tonal merging, HDR merging, focus stacking and a module for astrophotography.

Those features that DXO users wanted, soft proofing and luminosity masks? Affinity Photo does both plus sophisticated macros and batch processing.

Typically the entire suite of Affinity Photo, Designer and Publisher is about $165 as a one time purchase. It has been my experience with Affinity Photo that their upgrades are not just minor fixes but massive new feature sets. As they say, "All apps. All platforms. No subscription."

They were offering a six month free trial, not sure if that is still running.

Not trying to pitch you away from DXO Photolab or hard sell Affinity Photo, just trying to provide enough info at your early stage to make an informed decision. RAW development may be all you need, enough said.

I've always held the idea that committing to a tool larger than your current self will allow you to grow into that future creator you may wish to be someday.

All the best, a lot of great advice in this thread, hope I added something.

Thanks for the clarification on DXO Photolab, WideAspect!

As you mentioned, DXO concentrates on RAW image processing, and does not do photo stitching, HDR merging or focus stacking.   

But the cost is a bit less than you mention - at least what I paid last Black Friday.   I paid $169 - just for DXO Photolab, not for any of their optional packages like the film packs which I did not want.

I have used a free online tool for stitching to create panoramas (but probably not as well as some of the paid tools I assume).   

For HDR, I have found that together with the excellent dynamic range of modern cameras (I have an R6), and the recovery and noise correction tools in DXO, I have never been unable to create the photo I want from a single picture.  I know this will not be the same for everyone - for me, as an amateur, it is enough dynamic range.

Again, thanks for the important clarifications on this software.

Cheers

Rob

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