The Layers feature has been well implemented and works extremely well (although I didn’t use it in the processing of the images in this article) FeaturesĬapture One Pro has features easily on par with Lightroom, in fact it spans the features of both Lightroom and Photoshop. I think it might be a case of 2 days to learn and a lifetime to master. I was surprised how easy it was to achieve good results once I had picked up the basics of the application. I understand that a number of these performance improvements have come with the recent version 11 release Ease of Use Lightroom is well known for being slow and Capture One was far quicker at importing and managing files. Sharpening does not result in the artefacts that are present in Lightroom and as such can be pushed further as required. SharpenessĬapture One Pro produces sharper results out of the box. The renders are very similar in most cases but quite different in others. I found it a useful exercise spending some time editing the images in both applications. In each case these were output as sRGB JPG’s with a longe edge resolution of 2048 pixels and sharpen for web applied (Defaults for both Lightroom and Capture One)Ĭapture One Pro Vs Adobe Lightroom Classic CC - Conclusion I have included galleries of the processed images at the end of the article for reference. I decided to take eight Fuji RAW Files (Fuji X-T2 and Fuji X-T3) and spend 15 minutes editing them in Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic CC (ver 8) and later another 15 minutes (actually less!) editing the same eight RAW files in Capture One Pro Fujifilm This article is not intended to be a scientific comparison but more of a real world test of RAW processing. I was intrigued by the recent partnership between Phase One and Fuji and wanted to see for myself just how good Capture One might be for processing Fuji RAWs I decided to trial Capture One Pro Fujifilm while waiting for Adobe Lightroom to support the RAW files coming out of the new Fuji X-T3. I’m putting this article together as much about demonstrating to myself the merits (or not) of either switching entirely to Capture One Pro, incorporating it into my editing workflow or ignoring its existence. The debate between which RAW converter does the better job has been running for years and there are many in-depth articles and comparisons available. I know what you’re thinking, how many more articles and videos do we need comparing Capture One Pro with Adobe Photoshop Lightroom?
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