Digital Photo Professional Ver.4.3 for Macintosh Instruction Manual
Table Of Contents
- Digital Photo Professional
- Introduction
- Downloading Images
- Viewing Images
- Organizing and Sorting Images
- Editing Images
- RAW Images
- Editing JPEG and TIFF Images
- Tool Palettes
- Editing with the Basic Adjustment Tool Palette
- Editing with the Tone Adjustment Tool Palette
- Editing with the Color Adjustment Tool Palette
- Editing with the Detailed Adjustment Tool Palette
- Editing with the Trimming/Angle Adjustment Tool Palette
- Editing with the Lens Correction Tool Palette
- Editing with the Dust Delete/Copy Stamp Tool Palette
- Setting Work Color Space
- Using the Soft-Proof Colors Function
- Saving Editing Results
- Re-Editing an Image
- Utilizing Adjustment Contents (Recipe)
- Adjusting by Comparing Multiple Images
- Editing Efficiently
- Compositing Images
- Creating HDR (High Dynamic Range) Images
- Transferring a RAW Image to Photoshop
- Customizing the Main Window Toolbar
- Printing Images
- Processing Large Numbers of RAW Images
- Remote Shooting
- Specifying Preferences
- Reference
88
3
Sorting
Images
1
2
4
5
Introduction
Contents
Downloading
Images
Viewing
Images
Printing
Images
Editing
Images
Reference/
Index
6
Processing
Large Numbers
of RAW Images
7
Remote
Shooting
8
Specifying
Preferences
3
Specify the necessary settings, and then click the
[Save] button.
By default, the image is converted and saved to a JPEG image
with the highest image quality, without changing the image size.
Change the settings according to your requirements.
The RAW image is converted to a JPEG or TIFF image which is
then saved as a new image in the specified save destination.
Click and save
Select the save
destination
Select an image
type
Enter a file name
DPP’s RAW image development processing technology is continually
being improved upon so that you can perform the latest image
processing more appropriately.
Meaning that, between two different versions of DPP, processing results
may differ very slightly even if with the same RAW image data, or the
results of significant editing of RAW image data with an attached recipe
may be different.
When you want to save the developing or editing results of the version
you are currently using as it is, saving the image as a separate file (p.87)
is recommended.
To save the developing/editing results for the version you are
currently using
By saving as a separate JPEG or TIFF image as explained
above, some image deterioration that accompanies editing/saving
occurs as when editing with general image editing software.
By saving as explained above, a trimmed image (p.66) or dust-
erased image (p.80 to p.84) actually becomes a trimmed image
or dust-erased image.
You can batch convert and save multiple images (p.114).