So cool to discover the possibilities with the DPP4. When we travel, we don't always have time to stay around in an area for too long to take the perfect shot. So being able to adjust raw pictures after the fact is so useful. Thanks again!
This information is exactly what I was looking for using DPP4. Thank you SO much for being on RU-vid. I have subscribed to your channel and will search your videos for other tips that I can use. I don't want to pay a subscription fee to use Lightroom and my DPP4 came free with my camera. Thanks again!
How difficult is it to do this in latest version of photoshop? Especially would be interesting to see if it's possible to increase exposure of face only
It is pretty easy to do in Adobe Light Room. They have automatic masking where the software automatically selects the subject, once selected you can increase brightness or decrease shadows only of that object.
Can you guide me to a video where I can save the original raw image? If I’m editing a photo, once I save the photo, it destroy the original and if I have to come back and keep editing my reference becomes the save image not the original. I enjoy your videos, I’m a beginner, less than 1 year, and for hobby photographer, and your videos had kept me from jumping into an expensive unneeded software. Thank you.
Hi Julio, thank you for watching and for the question. Once you make any edits to a RAW file, you cannot save it as a RAW file any more. It will become a JPG or whichever format you choose when saving. When you click the Save button DPP4 will create a new file with the edits but the RAW file will remain unchanged. But also when you have made edits in DPP4 and when you exit the application it should come up with a message that asks if you want to save edits, if you say yes to this, it will not affect the original RAW file but it will keep the edits in DPP4. I hope that's what you meant :D
@@DomsMediaZone Dom, thanks for the reply. That is exactly what I mean. But it must be me. I found a solution by just duplicating the raw file before editing. I'll try to walk you through my process. Once I edit my raw file, I can press the 1:1* option and it will show me the original file next to the final product. I go to save and convert, and it will get saved as a JPEG in the folder of my choosing. If I exit the application or change the folder, just like you said it will prompt me to save edits, which I press yes. So far so good. The problem comes when I open the same raw file again. I find out that the 1:1* option is the same which looks like the final product with all the changes. I'm looking for a way that the 1:1* option stays the same. Is it just me?