Excellent information. Thanks for all your hard work. I've been tempted 
to try Lightroom when I have time. But I'm still up to my elbows in 
wedding pictures.
Paul
On Dec 14, 2006, at 1:21 AM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:

> I've been engaged in a couple of discussions on the DPReview.com
> forum and privately with a couple of friends regards RAW processing
> for K10D files. My RAW conversion workflow for the past year and more
> has been based entirely around Photoshop CS2+Bridge+Camera Raw. Some
> contend that Silkypix does a better job with the K10D captures on
> detailing and noise ... it is compatible with the K10 PEF files. RAW
> Developer is too, and many seem to find it quite a good RAW
> converter. And there's Lightroom, which I've been casually working
> with/learning for a while now. Lightroom and Camera Raw can only
> process the K10D DNG files ... but have no defaults set up for the
> K10D yet, and there is contention that they do not do as good a job
> on noise and detailing. So I decided to do some direct experimentation.
>
> The light this afternoon was dark and flat. I went out and made some
> test exposures with camera and tripod, specifically targeting
> subjects that would exercise the RAW conversion routines ability to
> work with high detail, noise, and difficult color balance. I made
> both PEF and DNG exposures of each scene, at ISO 100, 400 and 800. I
> downloaded and installed the latest Silkypix and RAW Developer
> applications (evaluation copies) for Mac OS X.
>
> My testing would end up with a print to evaluate. I am not
> particularly concerned with how 1:1 pixel rendering on the computer
> screen looks, what's important to me is how an A3 print looks out of
> the R2400. So I won't be showing the Photoshop files that were
> produced ... you'll have to forgive me for this, but I'm testing for
> my work which is producing prints. Web display quality is secondary,
> and since I only ever post down-sampled, smallish renderings to the
> web, it isn't difficult to take a just acceptable print file and
> produce a perfectly good web rendering with respect to noise and
> detailing.
>
> Silkypix:
>
> I spent two hours trying to work an image with Silkypix and gave up.
> To me, the control interface and logic is completely impenetrable. I
> read all the documentation, tried to give it the maximum benefit of
> the doubt, and nothing I did looked even presentable. PEF default
> color balances were awful, way way way off base, and I could not find
> a way to correct them to get in the ballpark. DNG default color
> balances did a lot better but were still off. The best I could do
> with it produced an oddly colored, noisy looking, poor rendering. Not
> even worth producing a print to compare against.
>
> RAW Developer:
>
> I then turned to RAW Developer. Read the documentation, took the very
> same DNG file and started adjusting. I'm not entirely comfortable
> with the "curves style" primary adjustment adjustment mechanism but
> it got a decent rendering done for me. Took about 20 minutes. Noise
> and detailing are good (this particular image is an ISO 800 shot of
> leaf and grass). I intentionally turned off all noise reduction and
> sharpening, made a PSD file.
>
> Camera RAW:
>
> Next I went to ACR. I know ACR very very well. It took me five
> minutes to produce a rendering from the DNG file that I liked and
> output to a .PSD file, again, sans all sharpening, noise removal,
> etc. Used nothing but my standard techniques ... all on the "basic"
> adjustment panel. Everything came into where I wanted it to be in
> moments. I am not sure why some folks seem to have so much trouble
> with it.
>
> Lightroom:
>
> Then I took the file to Lightroom beta 4.1. I have spent some time
> working with Lightroom so I knew somewhat more about the controls
> than with RAW developer and Silkypix. To my amazement, I was able to
> dial in the rendering I wanted, even better than ACR, in about two
> minutes. I didn't expect that. Again, I turned off noise reduction
> and sharpening as best I could and output a .PSD file.
>
> Next I opened all three renderings in Photoshop CS2 and printed them
> to an A3 size. The renderings are slightly different ... the ACR
> version is the most neutral/flat, the RAW Developer version is a
> little richer, the Lightroom rendering is deep and rich. I could tune
> all of them to be as close as possible in Photoshop but that wasn't
> the point of this exercise: I want to see what I can achieve with the
> RAW converters. Photoshop is just a printing vehicle in this test.
>
> Comparing the three prints in detailing and noise using a magnifying
> glass, the Lightroom produced rendering is the best. It is slightly
> smoother and slightly less detailed than the other two, but it looks
> the best. The ACR and RAW Developer prints show more roughness from
> noise and slightly more detail, about on par in that respect. I know
> I could do more with the noise and detailing using techniques in
> Photoshop, but again that wasn't the point.
>
> This convinces me that I'm going to spend more time working with and
> learning Lightroom. I'll remain dependent upon Photoshop/Camera Raw
> as my production system until Lightroom goes final. And I will not
> spend any more time with Silkypix ... I just can't work effectively
> in that environment. RAW Developer has lots of promise, it would be
> better with some more time and practice. But it has some other
> issues, not concerned with either its user interface or rendering
> qualities, that cause me to turn away from it.
>
> You may wonder why I didn't include Pentax Lab in this effort.
> Simple: not enough time. I might install it and try it tomorrow. But
> I don't expect much from it, so it's not a big priority.
>
> In the end, whatever works for your needs is best.
>
> Godfrey
>
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