![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Technicolor has a companion LUT for their picture style. Photoshop allows you to apply LUT's using the Color Lookup adjustment layer. If you know of some way to make this work, please, do tell.Īs for Dave Merchant's comment stating " There's no reason to use it if you're shooting RAW, as not only isn't the curve applied to the RAW file, but you have the bit depth in the image which makes applying it pointless in the first place." I disagree that there is no reason. As far as I know from the many articles I've been reading for the past two days the picture style does not get saved into the raw data. How are you able to get this to work? I just tried a test with three different picture styles (CineStyle, VisionTech and BeautyShot) and all three opened in camera raw looking identical with the Canon standard picture style. No software provides you with true reality, just what they percieve to be a realistic and pleasing capture. Each camera manufacturer provides their own style and rendition as did the various film manufacturers of slide and negative film like Kodak, Agfa etc. Why would you pay a lot of money for Adobe software that rendered the same output that is provided by your camera. They have their own chef that is provining their own rendition of the raw data, and provide lots of tools to allow you to make your own creative adjustments. Lightroom has its own unique processes and profiles developed for each supported camera and does not use the profiles and other in camera settings and tastes that can be applied by the camera firmware/software. Yes it has functionality that allows it to also work with rendered files like tiff and jpeg but its main purpose is processing raw files. ![]() LR is a program for photographers to process the raw data captured by digital still cameras. You are trying to use Lightroom as a tool that it was not designed to be. ![]()
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