mani
Well-known
charjohncarter said:You have to become very skilled with the sharpening tool on your converter. I have all these converters and many editing programs. And it seems the sharpening tools are slightly different on each one. I even think the unmask sharp tool on LightRoom is a little different than on Photoshop. But that is my opinion. You are right the RAW file is sharp, but converted to visual form in most converters it is soft. The further or completed sharpening is up to you.
All very true. There's definitely a new learning curve in Lightroom that complements any expertise one might've gained over the years in Photoshop, but I'm still convinced by comparing some of the really fine-grained detail still present in the Iridient RAW file against the Lightroom files, that no amount of highlight/lowlight recovery and sharpening would retrieve that granular structure that Lightroom chooses to discard before the user even has the chance to edit the file.
If I go for the new Macbook Pro I'll give the Aperture trial a look - otherwise I guess ease of use and existing investment will win over fine detail, and I'll stick with Lightroom. Maybe Adobe might one day fix their algorithms to allow users to control the finest details themselves.