I have seen a few questions about processing RAW files from DSLR's so I thought I'd point out an application I have had some nice success using.
It is called Bibble from www.bibblelabs.com - it has support for the Canon's, Nikon's and Fuji raw formats, and includes nice enough support for Photoshop. Certainly the conversion functions are very good (although personally for the Fuji S2 I prefer the color and cntrols from RAW Converter EX in most cases)
Worth a look considering the $99 price tag. Versions available for Mac and PC (Mac doesn't have S2 support at the moment)
Your other option is QImage (which I am not fond of).
M
RAW Image Processer Application/Photoshop Plugin
Started by marriard, Jan 03 2003 09:18 PM
2 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 03 January 2003 - 09:18 PM
#2
Posted 04 January 2003 - 10:46 AM
Thanks for the posting Paul.
I like Qimage for printing, but I'm not fond of it for the Fuji RAW conversion process. It's sorta hard to use and I don't like the interface. I hate to say it, but it seems to have TOO many options for me.
Perhaps in the future I will use Qimage, but like you, I like RAW converter EX.
I'll take a look at Bibble.
Cheers
James
I like Qimage for printing, but I'm not fond of it for the Fuji RAW conversion process. It's sorta hard to use and I don't like the interface. I hate to say it, but it seems to have TOO many options for me.
Perhaps in the future I will use Qimage, but like you, I like RAW converter EX.
I'll take a look at Bibble.
Cheers
James
Canon 1DsMkIII - Seacam Housing
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
Dual Ikelite Strobes
Photo site - www.reefpix.org
#3
Posted 04 January 2003 - 11:56 AM
I like Bibble, although it is occasionally unstable. Its plugin does not pass though any EXIF data (for Nikon, at least).
Be careful with the one-click white balance. It tries sometimes too hard to make a pixel white. The author says it will automatically channel-mix when necessary.
You can browse in it, white balance the ones you like, then select them and batch convert to 16-bit TIFF.
Be careful with the one-click white balance. It tries sometimes too hard to make a pixel white. The author says it will automatically channel-mix when necessary.
You can browse in it, white balance the ones you like, then select them and batch convert to 16-bit TIFF.
I love it when a plan comes together.
- Col. John "Hannibal" Smith
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Nikon, Seatool, Nexus, Inon
My Galleries
- Col. John "Hannibal" Smith
------
Nikon, Seatool, Nexus, Inon
My Galleries
