Adobe Camera Raw does not work on TIFF files either. No RAW converter  
does.

Vuescan's TIFF RAW files are fundamentally different from digital  
camera RAW files in that they are already RGB files, they simply  
haven't been gamma corrected and color adjusted/inverted for film  
characteristics. The operations required are quite different from  
what is done to a digital camera's RAW capture output.

I find it much more useful to use Vuescan including the basic scan  
corrections and output TIFF files for further adjustment in Photoshop  
CS2. In other words, my workflow from scanned film and digital  
capture intersect after the RAW conversion phase.

I tried an eval of Capture One LE but preferred the options of using  
Photoshop CS2 + Bridge + Camera Raw. I also keep experimenting with  
the Adobe Lightroom beta ... it might pose a workflow solution that  
is appealing by the time it is finished.

For best understanding of RAW workflow with Photoshop CS2, read Bruce  
Fraser's excellent "Real World Camera One with  Photoshop CS2". It  
will save weeks to months of experimentation time in learning.

Godfrey

On Jul 16, 2006, at 3:04 AM, Bob W wrote:

> how does Capture One LE compare with ACR? I don't have PS CS2 (yet?)
> as I'm still looking at the various options that are available. So I
> haven't used ACR, but I have downloaded the trial version of Capture
> One LE and it seems at first glance to be pretty good.
>
> One thing I don't much like about it is that it only reads RAW, not
> TIFF as far as I can tell. This is a disadvantage for me because I
> have a lot of film to scan, which I save in Vuescan's raw TIFF format,
> and then use the same workflow for both camera and scanned inputs - I
> don't want to be switching tools and doing significantly different
> things just because the pictures come from a different source.
>
> So, does ACR read and operate on TIFFs as well as RAW?


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