OK I need you to clear this up...
OK I need you to clear this up...
We recommend using the YCrCb JPEG color space to process color images in Neat Image.
bottom of page 20 in the book.
OK I always use Raw in my D10. But you say to use JPEG? Or am I missing something's!!!
bottom of page 20 in the book.
OK I always use Raw in my D10. But you say to use JPEG? Or am I missing something's!!!
It says YCrCb JPEG working color space in Neat Image, not JPEG file format. The working color space internally used by Neat Image and file format (JPEG, TIFF, BMP, RAW - whatever) - are not the same thing.
The point is the "YCrCb JPEG" working color space is recommended when you process RGB color images.
Vlad
The point is the "YCrCb JPEG" working color space is recommended when you process RGB color images.
Vlad
Such a patch would require a lot of extra work and I am sure it will add very little to what is already possible with the TIFF format. TIFF is fully supported by Photoshop, it is perfectly standard. PSD is proprietory and non-standardized. If Adobe changes PSD format we will have to track their changes. TIFF is better in this respect. And Photoshop doesn't care what to open - TIFF or PSD.
BTW, you can save batch output in *.PSD if you use Neat Image plug-in within the Photoshop batch facility. I am sure you know how this facility works.
Vlad
BTW, you can save batch output in *.PSD if you use Neat Image plug-in within the Photoshop batch facility. I am sure you know how this facility works.
Vlad
If you process images from a digital camera using Neat Image and this is the first postprocessing step after the camera then the images you have before Neat Image are always single-layer JPEGs or TIFFs. After Neat Image, you also receive single-layer TIFFs. Photoshop has no problem opening such image files. You open such a file just like a PSD file and what you see is a single layer image in Photoshop.
Then using the plug-in seems to be the best choice. - You will not need to save an intermediate file; the image can go directly from the 1st (RAW conversion) to the 2nd step (noise reduction) of workflow.
Also, if you do RAW conversion in batch, you can add noise reduction in the same batch as well. So everything will be completely automated.
Vlad
Also, if you do RAW conversion in batch, you can add noise reduction in the same batch as well. So everything will be completely automated.
Vlad