The noise/weird artifact issue is visible without any edits. One is the original ARW file with no edits at all. I work at high resolutions and getting clean RAW processing is an essential part of my workflow. I've run lightrooms new AI noise reduction on it to see if that makes a difference, and it does - at least a bit - however, given the length of time that takes, that is not a practical solution for anything more than the occasional image.Īnyway, the results are so obviously inferior to Capture One Pro, I will be returning to that unless this is something that can be resolved. I've noticed it most in skin in the mid-tone transitional areas, but it is present in all areas, including as noise in solid colour areas. And under any kind of sharpening, it gets much more pronounced. I would have written that off to different default noise reduction defaults in the two programs except for the strange textured noise artifacts that I mentioned above, which seems to point to something else going on. In addition, the photos were generally just generally noisier/grainier in Lightroom than in Capture One Pro. When working on the images with Lightroom and ACR I very quickly noticed that the images seemed to have strange noise and artifacts in them. The other day, I began looking at and working with some ARW files shot with that camera in the latest Lightroom Classic (12.3) and Adobe Camera RAW (15.3) versions. This compression can affect quality, but this loss of quality isn’t noticeable to most users.My primary camera body is a Sony A7Riv. JPG is a ‘lossy’ format, meaning that it is compressed to save storage space and make it easier to share. JPEG stands for Joint Photographic Experts Group, which is the name of the committee that standardised the format. However, you can usually adjust settings to save into other formats if needed. Many cameras, smartphones, and basic photo or drawing programs will automatically save into JPG format. ![]() JPGs are 2D pixel-based ‘raster’ images, which makes them better for photographs or scans, rather than digital illustrations which are often better as ‘vector’ images. JPG is a universal format which can be opened by almost all image-viewing or -editing programs, by web browsers, and by certain other apps, and they’re supported by most devices. JPG, or JPEG, is one of the most widely used digital image formats. ![]() You would typically create a PDF if you wanted to ensure document fidelity, to make it more secure, or to create a copy for storage. Creating a PDF can involve compressing a file, making it take up less storage space. They can be viewed on almost all devices. ![]() PDF files aren’t typically created from scratch, but are usually converted, saved or ‘printed’ from other documents or images before sharing, publishing online or storing. It is maintained by the International Organisation for Standardization (ISO). The PDF format is now a standard open format that isn’t just available under Adobe Acrobat. The format has evolved to allow for editing and interactive elements like electronic signatures or buttons. It was developed by Adobe so people could share documents regardless of which device, operating system, or software they were using, while preserving the content and formatting. PDF stands for ‘Portable Document Format’ file.
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