![]() I appreciate the additional knowledge and context it seems that there is still work to be done by Leica and not it’s customers. They need each other in some respect and would it kill SONY to send them a camera on loan for a week and same with Leica? Well this is interesting context and I see your point somewhat however the issue isn’t buying every camera it’s having good relationships with camera makers and the reverse. Capture One refused for years to support Leica cameras over such a silly squabble. All they have to do is process the file as presented by the camera. It is hardly Leica's fault that the more obscure software developers write their software incorrectly. However, leave the camera output intact and there little need for lens profiling in postprocessing.ĭNG is a universal open source format, so there shouldn't be a problem. ![]() the optical part is designed with the digital part in mind getting the full quality with the complete output, which means that if you remove the digital corrections (which can be done, they are in a sidecar file), you will be left with an. This is becoming a real inhibitor for doing anything with color or remotely sophisticated.Ĭould you please explain what you are trying to achieve? The lens of the Q is a hybrid design, i.e. I would welcome any suggestions for manually correcting the distortion on the Q2 images after they're in TIF and have lost all the lens profile information that is in the DNG. How many thousands more do I have to spend on software to get an app that supports this camera. No other app that I have supports it whatsoever, including Alien Skin Exposure, Luminar, or DXO PhotoLab 2. When I go to manually select the lens profile for the Q2 in either LR or ACR, Leica isn't even listed in the makes of camera. ![]() I *must* first process the image in another app for reasons I am not going to get into, and I end up with a TIF. However, I cannot fix it *manually* after I've processed the image in another app using the DNG file, and save out to a TIF. I can fix it automatically in Adobe Camera Raw and Lightroom CC. The only app that appears to have it is Adobe. It needs to make sure imaging app developers can get the lens profiles of its $5k camera. I am beginning to think Leica has a real problem.
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