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[Closed] Photographers and using linux for post processing.

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Is it possible?

Currently I have tried the following;

[url= http://rawstudio.org/ ]Rawstudio[/url], Nice intuitive UI.
[url= http://www.darktable.org/ ]Darktable[/url], Lots of features, not so intuitive.
[url= http://ufraw.sourceforge.net/ ]UFRaw[/url], Missing a couple of features such as sharpen.

What do you use?
Are there any others I should try?
Should I give up and use Lightroom?

I'm struggling to export a decent jpeg, they look a bit crap.


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 10:23 am
 DrJ
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GIMP ?


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 10:30 am
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How rude!

Hadn't thought of that.


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 10:38 am
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gimp is excellent, and there are a few good books about for learning how to use it. I use the one by Akkana Peck. [url= http://books.google.co.uk/books/about/Beginning_GIMP.html?id=OTf924R-COgC ]here[/url]


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 10:55 am
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Gimp won't process the raw files without a plugin though


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 11:12 am
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indeed ufraw is the baby that plugs right into gimp and it works nicely. Is this an issue?


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 11:20 am
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no.

Have you used the dcraw plugin?


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 11:25 am
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no is it any good?

edit just googled it and dcraw is the program that drives ufraw.


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 11:34 am
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They both do similar things. Dcraw gives you simplified dialog for import where as ufraw displays the ufraw app.


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 12:28 pm
 JPR
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Colour management is still a bit of a problem in linux. It makes any serious photography work a bit difficult ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_color_management)


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 12:42 pm
 dobo
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digikam is good for an all round photo manager and simple manipulation and uploader.

rawtherapee is a decent raw processor with sharpening tools


 
Posted : 21/01/2013 8:19 pm
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after one day this one looks very promising, not free though:[url= http://www.corel.com/corel/product/index.jsp?pid=prod4670071&cid=catalog20038&segid=6000006&storeKey=us&languageCode=en ]aftershot pro[/url] formerly known as bibble

been using ratherapee for a couple of years in linux, but the above feels more intuitive


 
Posted : 22/01/2013 5:27 pm
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Why use Linux to run photographic software? It takes a lot of time and money to write top quality demosaicing software and that has to be customised for each camera that is supported. It doesn't make sense to me (a photographer not weekend warrior) not forgetting the colour managed workflow problems you are likely to encounter.


 
Posted : 22/01/2013 5:32 pm
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I'm fairly sure one of my Flickr contacts who was big in Linnux photo processing was persudade to be a proper computer.

Although you can post process with free tools i have found that the ones you pay for are alot better. particularly for RAW conversion. Gimp is Ok as an editor but it does lack 16 bit processing


 
Posted : 22/01/2013 5:47 pm