D2x and D3 RAW pics not sharp @ 100% view
Any thoughts on this...?
D2x and D3 RAW pics are displayed sharply for a short moment only once they have been opened and become softly a short moment later (in the 100% view only). That does not happen to D3x and P30+ captures.
Anybody there with a hint?
Thanks a lot and regards,
Udo
D2x and D3 RAW pics are displayed sharply for a short moment only once they have been opened and become softly a short moment later (in the 100% view only). That does not happen to D3x and P30+ captures.
Anybody there with a hint?
Thanks a lot and regards,
Udo
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Can you let up know which version of CO4 you use? 0 -
Hi Paul,
Thanks, for you reply. It is the latest version 4.8.3. What I meant with 100% is the whole pic, i.e. Fit to screen.
Best regards,
udo0 -
[quote="Udo1" wrote:
What I meant with 100% is the whole pic, i.e. Fit to screen.
Fit to screen is (in general) not 100%. Enlarge/zoom in to 100% with the slider in the upper right corner of the Viewer and see whether this helps.0 -
I have Exactly this problem (view starts sharp and then jumps to a blurred version after a couple of seconds) with a Canon 1D Mk IV - even when i turn all sharpening and chroma noise filtering down.....any ideas 0 -
What size screen are you using? Go to preferences image and set the preview image size to 1200px or larger if you are using a 30". 0 -
[quote="NN120542" wrote:
I have Exactly this problem (view starts sharp and then jumps to a blurred version after a couple of seconds) with a Canon 1D Mk IV - even when i turn all sharpening and chroma noise filtering down.....any ideas
What you described is actually the image loading. When the image first appears there is no Proxie file for Capture One to read, as such it simply enlarges the embedded thumbnail. This may not be "sharp" per se but rather a pixelated and distorted view of your Thumbnail. Once the proxie is generated you are viewing the true RAW data and can proceed to edit in an accurate manner.
Also, as Paul suggested, zooming in to 100% or having the floating Focus Check window is the only accurate way to determine sharpness in a 1:1 manner.0 -
The problem you describe sounds like the Noise reduction tool. As it automatically adds a blur to images to adjust for noise, at 1600+ iso, it gets a little crazy on our stuff. It would be great if we could have a preference to stop it at 25.... right now it goes past 50 and does real damage sometimes. The adjustment seems to happen after the preview comes up, so it looks sharp, then goes blurry. 0
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