![]() There have been few DNG versions and there are back compatibility issues as you might. The adobe website article on how to use the DNG converter is quite useful. I was curious and started to look at the history of the DNG. Morale: never attempt to use some automatic tool like AI for culling and never throw away your raws! ![]() If I had culled based on sharpness and AF locking perfectly on the eyes this one would have been binned. To illustrate what I mean: I posted an image two days ago here: 35mm f/1.4 R - Alex (Noir photography, 2019). I was quick to discard anything that wasn't razorsharp some decades ago (I'm not alone here) but nowadays I have a completely different set of criteria than sharpness, resolution and other technicalities, my artistic mindset has evolved. Also, I revisit my catalog often and find some gems I completely overlooked way back then. When DxO added support for Fuji, they worked hard to provide compatibility even for the oldest X-Trans models. ![]() Technology is in constant progress, and we might have even better conversion coming later. Even if terabytes are cheap, batch converting everything on, or before, import is a waste of ressources as far as I'm concerned. ![]() I select one or several images I want to edit, convert them to DNG in DxO and import back into Lightroom for editing. Terabytes are cheap these days.īut it's not automatic. Given that I use high ISO very very often, I prefer DxO raw conversion with DeepPrime over CameraRaw, so I do indeed often convert to. I don't know if when we embed the raw file in the DNG as well (it's an option) DxO would recognise it. DeepPrime is part of the raw conversion algoritm, and your DNG's were already converted to RGB tiffs. ![]()
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