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p.5 #13 · ACR vs Canon DPP, What a difference | |
Bottom line: For picture quality, DPP kicks ACR's ass. I understand how both work, and I've used ACR and tools light Lightroom and Bridge and Photoshop for years (well, year for Lightroom, but years for Bridge and Photoshop).
As for speed, DPP is definitely slow and cumbersome to use. But geting used to it really makes a big difference. learning to copy and paste recipes (think lightroom develop setttings or camera raw preferences ) can really help, along with knowing how to mark images with 1,2, or 3 checks.
Normally what I do is tweak the beginning image in a scene (or one with a White Balance card) for white balance exposure and nothing else. I avoid the RGB area like the plague. NR has been set to 0, and I don't even like picture styles (that one is a personal pref). I set to neutral, 0 sharpness saturation and contrast, and thats it.
I copy the recipe from this image and paste it into the rest of that "scene", where they should all share the same basic look. At this point, I give keepers 1 check.
I do this for every scene, and it's fairly quick. If I take 500 pictures, with an average of 5 images per scene, I'm only tweaking about 100 photos. And maybe this is just me, but since I leave everything vanilla, tweaking takes me a few seconds (mostly perfecting the white balance)
Now, where it gets slow (But hey, it's all relative.. Lightroom is no hare to DPP's turtle.. and who won that race?) is the rendering out.
I just hit the select all checkmarked 1 command, And then hit the batch process command. I let the computer process all the images, while I go do something more productive, anything from a meal, to going to sleep. Just depends on the files.
What I do love about other tools, specifcally Lightroom, is the versatility of the tool. Whereas I'm very spartan with DPP, I have a tendency to go crazy with lightroom, adding vignettes, trying split tones, messing with the curves, etc. I guess that's the idea behind the tool, in my eyes. DPP is more of a rendering tool, while Lightroom is more of a darkroom type tool. Photoshop, of course, is more like a full fledged print studio, where they can render and do darkroom edits, as well as adding graphics and other non photographic bits.
Just my take though. I'd be glad to offer up some comparisons of my work with DPP and Lightroom or ACR.
Max
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