Canon’s Digital Photo Professional (DPP) is a free, and surprisingly powerful, image organising and editing application that ships in the box with every EOS camera. You’ll find DPP on the EOS Digital Solution Disk alongside other very useful Canon developed software, such as EOS Utility.
CPN writer George Cairns takes a closer look at the capabilities of the DPP software up to version 3.13.0. If you consider your RAW images files as digital negatives then, like traditional negatives, they need to be processed in order to reveal their true colours and tones. DPP has all the digital darkroom tools you’ll need to claw back highlight or shadow details, banish colour casts and crop to improve composition.
Digital Photo Professional is specially designed to work closely with your Canon EOS camera and lenses, thus enabling you to correct more challenging problems such as chromatic aberration and lens-related artifacts such as distortion and vignetting. In this article we’ll take you on a comprehensive tour of the powerful features of this Canon image processing software. Keeping up to date and setting up.
Meanwhile, if you want to report a drink driver after the drink driving has taken place, you can call the police on 101, or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111. Remember, someone can still be over the legal alcohol limit the day after drinking. The issue was this: When can the police rely on an anonymous tip of dangerous driving as a reason to stop a car to see if the driver is drunk? One August afternoon in 2008, 911 dispatch in Humboldt County, California, got a call from a driver reporting that a specific silver Ford pickup truck, license number. State officials have made a call to all citizens to report any potential drunk drivers to local authorities by calling 911 or their local jurisdiction. That all are innocent until proven guilty, it seems counterintuitive that a driver be pulled over upon mere suspicion from an unknown or anonymous citizen's report. How to report drunk driving anonymously. Tips for Dealing with an Aggressive Driver. First and foremost, keep your cool. If they're tailgating you, change lanes, let them pass, and keep a safe distance (5+ car lengths). Avoid looking directly at them, and making eye contact. Ignore any rude gestures they may make, and do not return them.
You can ask Digital Photo Professional to open specific file types – such as JPEGs, RAW files and TIFFs – after EOS Utility has imported them. At the time of writing the latest incarnation of Digital Photo Professional software is version 3.13.0, but it’s well worth keeping DPP up to date.
There is an issue with most computers I've tried, the service actually does not start properly and if SA installation program does not see the service, it tries to install it but it fails equally and at another point installation aborts. I played a bit with the account/domain etc. Program cracks and keygens. Edited: I had the SQL 2005 installation files downloaded and tried it independently from JD SA.
The latest version supports new Canon lenses and recognises RAW format files from the more recent Canon EOS DSLR cameras. If you’ve got an older version of DPP already installed on your computer it’s free to update it. Indeed, if you’ve lost your software disk, you can download and install DPP for free. To download an update for DPP (or install it from scratch) just click for the Canon Europe Download Centre, then select your product type and camera model details and select the software option. The menu will offer a variety of downloads such as ImageBrowser EX, EOS Utility and EOS Digital Solution Disk Software, so scroll down and click on the appropriate link to download DPP for Mac or Windows.
While you’re there, you can also download a copy of the EOS Utility software. You will also find a copy of DPP’s manual, which will help you to further maxmise all of the functionalities of the software. Once DPP and the EOS Utility have been installed, plug your Canon EOS camera into your computer. If you’ve already opened DPP you can choose ‘Tools Start EOS Utility’ from the main window’s menu.
In EOS Utility, go to ‘Preferences’ and choose ‘Linked Software’ in the drop-down menu. In the ‘Linked Software’ menu, choose ‘Digital Photo Professional’. Click ‘Register’, choose the file types that you want DPP to open as soon as the EOS Utility has imported them, then Click ‘OK’.
The Quick Check view in DPP enables you to assign Check marks or Ratings that enable you to organise your photographs. Note that you can check AF points and metadata in Quick Check.
Quality control – ratings and check marks As your digital collection continues to grow it can be an increasing challenge to manage it. By default most image processing apps display photos according to shooting date and DPP is no exception. However, DPP enables you to sort imported images by assigning ratings or check marks to them.
In DPP browse to a folder of imported shots in order to view them as thumbnails. You can choose ‘View Large Thumbnail’ for a closer look, but to get a better idea of a shot’s quality choose ‘Tools Start Quick Check tool’ (or click the ‘Quick Check’ icon). Here you can zoom in to check the focus – and even discover which autofocus point was used when capturing the shot. You can summon the shot’s metadata too, which helps you discover if a fast ISO speed setting is likely to add noise, for example. Use the Sort menu in DPP to display files hierarchically according to their assigned star rating. You can use Quick Check to indulge in some quality control. Add a star rating (from 1 to 5) to highlight your favourite photographs, or assign a numerical check mark to sort shots by theme or type (such as landscape or portrait).
Assign ratings and check marks to thumbnails in DPP’s main window. Once you’ve rated or check marked your imported shots you can then use the ‘Sort’ menu to display the highest rated images at the top of the main window, or display them by their numerical check marks. You can also choose ‘View Thumbnail with information’ to list metadata alongside each image.
The handy histogram enables you to spot any images that might need exposure adjustment. You can also save specific files from any folder into the ‘Collection’ tab so they can be easily found later.
You can manually hide artifacts such as sensor spots by using DPP’s ‘Stamp’ tool to clone adjacent patches of pixels over them. Alternatively, use Apply Dust Delete Data if you’ve set that function up in-camera. If you’re faced with a particular problem, such as a tilted horizon, then you can choose ‘Tools Start Trimming/Angle Adjustment’. This enables you to quickly crop the shot using a variety of preset aspect ratios, as well as using the Angle slider to straighten any uneven horizons.
An optional overlay grid enables you to see true horizontal and vertical lines so that you can adjust the angle with precision. When editing in RAW format you can restore cropped detail at any time, as DPP makes non-destructive changes to the original RAW files.
To access more of DPP’s RAW processing tools, click on the ‘Edit image’ window icon and then click on the ‘Tool palette’ icon. In the Tool palette you’ll find four tabs – RAW, RGB, NR/ALO and Lens – that will unleash a host of powerful image processing tools.
If you can’t find a suitable White Balance preset, you can use DPP’s ‘Click white balance’ eyedropper to sample an area that should be a neutral white. The RAW tab enables you to adjust the camera settings.
The White Balance or Picture Style preset that you used to capture the shot is indicated by a little camera icon. You can use drop down menus to experiment with other White Balance or Picture Style presets and change the colours and tones of your shot in a couple of clicks. You can also manually tweak properties such as colours, tones and sharpness using the RAW tab’s sliders. Alternatively, you can warm up or cool down a shot and banish colour casts by clicking an eyedropper on an area that should be white. Noise Reduction and Auto Lighting Optimizer. The Noise Reduction/Auto Lighting Optimizer option of DPP allows you to alter chrominance or luminance image noise in either RAW or compressed images, and offers control over correction of brightness or contrast in images. In the Edit Image window you’ll find a handy Noise Reduction/Auto Lighting Optimizer (NR/ALO) tab.
This enables you to reduce chrominance or luminance image noise in either RAW or compressed images by tweaking slider settings. There’s also an Auto Lighting Optimizer control that enables you to quickly auto correct problems with brightness or contrast. This tool does the same job as the ALO feature in your Canon DSLR (it is in all current EOS DSLRs), which is designed to even out contrast by selectively adjusting areas of the image. It is especially useful when using flash or with backlit subjects as it can detect faces in the frame and brighten those areas to achieve a better result. ALO analyses contrast in captured images and modifies both shadows and highlights via tone curve adjustments to minimise loss of detail in contrasty light conditions. In-camera there are three levels of setting strength – Standard, Low and Strong – which can be used at any ISO speed, as well as the ability to turn the setting off (known as Disable).
The in-camera ALO results can be further fine-tuned in DPP. In DPP’s Edit window you can use the RGB tab’s curve tool to improve contrast (or restore tonal details) by manually re-shaping the curve.
One of DPP’s most powerful image adjustment tools can be found in the ‘Edit image’ window’s RGB tab. Here you can place points on a tone curve and then drag them up or down to change the shadows or highlights in an image. It’s quite easy to go over-the-top when manually editing points on a curve, so you can try and improve contrast automatically by clicking on the tone curve assist icons. Compositing Tool Digital Photo Professional’s relatively new Compositing tool (first seen in DPP 3.11) opens up some creative layering possibilities. After selecting your main image you can import a background shot and then use the Composite Method drop down menu to adjust the way the photos mix together (in a similar way to Photoshop’s layer blending modes).
Using the Compositing Tool of DPP software you can quickly and easily import and mix multiple shots together to produce creative composite images. Available from the Tools menu of DPP, the Compositing Tool allows multiple images to be combined with specific controls to determine how each individual layer will build on the ones lower in the overall composite. There are four fixed types of composites: Add, Average, Lighten and Darken, plus the useful Weighted option that provides precise control over which layer of the composite is more or less transparent. In practice the Weighted option is often the most flexible setting. Image layers can be individually adjusted for position relative to other image layers, if required.
You can use the Weighted slider to make one image more dominant than the other and adjust the position of the overlapping images by tapping on arrows. You can build up multiple layered effects by clicking ‘Continue’ and importing new shots. High Dynamic Range (HDR) image processing With some of the newer EOS DSLR cameras featuring built-in High Dynamic Range (HDR) imaging functions (first introduced in the EOS 5D Mark III in 2012), DPP additionally offers HDR image processing for all EOS camera owners. Similar to the in-camera HDR processing of the EOS 5D Mark III, the HDR command in DPP processes and combines three images to create an HDR composite.
The source images for the HDR process can be captured using the camera’s auto-exposure bracketing function. By shooting a series of bracketed shots you can capture both highlight and shadow detail in a high contrast scene and merge the shots together using DPP’s High Dynamic Range (HDR) command. DPP’s HDR menu command has controls that allow fine-tuning of brightness, colour and details. It takes the chosen images and processes them using the default ‘Natural’ profile to produce quite subtle results.
If the images were taken with the camera mounted on a tripod then they should all be aligned, but if the camera was handheld then the HDR Tool can be set to automatically align the frames. Brightness, saturation and contrast sliders can be used to adjust tone and colour, plus strength, smoothness and fineness alter the detail enhancement, so there’s plenty of control over the final image. You can also select from different presets such as Art Standard, Art Vivid, Art Bold and Art Embossed. Since the presets change the settings of each of the six sliders they let a photographer quickly achieve their intended results. You can fine-tune any of the sliders once the preset has been applied. You can use the Lens aberration correction tools of DPP to counteract common lens-induced artifacts such as distortion and vignetted corners. Digital Lens Optimizer (DLO) The newer versions of DPP software (from 3.11 onwards) also include the Digital Lens Optimizer in the Lens tab, thus enabling you to counteract a wider range of lens aberrations and, in turn, produce better looking shots.
The Digital Lens Optimizer is a special kind of image processing that achieves ideal optical characteristics by processing optical aberrations, image softening due to lens diffraction and the effects of using a low-pass filter with a CMOS image sensor. Currently 64 different lenses are supported, in combination with many Canon EOS cameras.
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To get the Digital Light Optimizer (or the Lens aberration correction feature) to work, you first need to download your lens profile to DPP. Canon advises you to turn off any sharpening in the RAW tab before applying the DLO. You can then sharpen the shot, but you won’t need to sharpen it as much thanks to the improvement produced by the DLO.
Working with RAW images, the Digital Lens Optimizer is designed to correct seven types of lens aberration:. Spherical aberration – image blur that occurs in the centre of the image. Field curvature – blurring at the edge of the image produced by the lens’ curved focal plane. Astigmatism – blurring in the radial and circular directions at the image periphery.
Comatic aberration – colour blurring appearing at the edge of the image in a radial direction (like a comet’s tale). Sagittal halo – this appears in the periphery of the image as a circular blur. Chromatic aberration of magnification – misaligned and blurred colours at the periphery of the image. Axial chromatic aberration – this is mainly purple coloured blur that occurs in the centre of an image where there are strong specular highlights.
You can apply the DLO by clicking ‘Tune’, ticking the Settings box and then increasing the strength of the slider. Click ‘Save’ when you’re happy with the results. The Digital Lens Optimizer does a better job than the Lens aberration correction tool at removing axial chromatic aberration.
Output Once you’ve organised your photographs and edited them to your satisfaction using DPP’s collection of image processing tools then it’s time to share them with colleagues or clients. You can export an edited RAW image as a JPEG or TIFF using the Convert and save command in the File menu. To speed up your output workflow DPP offers a Batch process tool icon in its main window toolbar.
This enables you to take a folder of RAW files and output them to a more shareable JPEG or TIFF format. You can also re-size them en-mass, change their resolution and give them new file names too. Via the Batch option you can convert multiple RAW files to re-sized JPEGS so you can put them online or share them easily via e-mail. In conclusion When working in tandem with the Canon EOS Utility software, Digital Photo Professional can empower you to organise, fix and share your images effectively. Because DPP is designed to work closely with your Canon EOS camera’s menu settings and lenses, you should be able to produce better looking results than you’d achieve with third party packages – especially thanks to the powerful Digital Lens Optimizer in the Edit image window’s Lens tab. If, for some reason, you’ve so far ignored the EOS Digital Solutions Disk that came in the box with your EOS DSLR it’s a good idea to download and take all of the available software for a test run. You will be pleasantly surprised by how powerful and useful it is.
Like most of us, you likely have dozens, if not hundreds of pictures stored on your phone or your camera's SD card. But are you making the most of them? Most of them probably look okay, but with a free photo editor and a little time you can transform them into something amazing that you won’t be able to wait to share online, or even frame on your wall. Whether you're looking for a total Photoshop alternative that gives you fine control over every minuscule detail of your photos, or a basic Instagram-style photo editor that offers a range of one-click filters, you’ll find something interesting here. If you're already happy with the general look of your photos and just want to tweak them a little before sharing them, a simple editor that allows you to resize, crop and apply filters will be ideal. Many of these have social media sharing built in, removing the hassle of uploading your snaps manually later.
They also have the benefit of being easier to use. If you're planning to print your work, you'll be better off considering a more nuanced photo editor that will give you the fine control you need to make your photos look perfect, even at high resolutions. Now, let’s dive into our list of the best free photo editors. Learning curve is a little steep The first thing that’s gonna be on a lot of people’s mind immediately is going to be ‘give me a good free alternative to Photoshop.’ (also known as the GNU Image Manipulation Program) is exactly that. It is, hands down, the most robust free photo editor on the market, and it's crammed with wonderful tools that perfectly match those you'd find in premium software, and more are being added every day. GIMP’s interface will be instantly familiar if you have ever used Photoshop - especially if you select the single-window mode, which lays out all its toolbars and canvases in an Adobe-style layout. The photo editing toolkit is breathtaking, and features layers, masks, curves, and levels.
You can eliminate flaws easily with the excellent clone stamp and healing tools, create custom brushes, apply perspective changes, and apply changes to isolated areas with smart selection tools. GIMP is an open source project, and its community of users and developers have created a huge collection of plugins to extend its utility even further. Many of these come pre-installed, and you can download more from the.
If that's not enough, you can even install too. This combination of power and flexibility make GIMP the best free photo editor you can download – whether you're using Windows, macOS or Linux. Less powerful than GIMP More is not, believe it or not, always better.
's simplicity is one of its main selling points; it's a quick, easy to operate free photo editor that's ideal for trivial tasks that don't necessarily justify the sheer power of GIMP. Don't let the name fool you, though. This isn't just a cheap copy of Microsoft's ultra-basic Paint – even if it was originally meant to replace it. It's a proper photo editor, just one that lands on the basic side of the curve. Paint.NET’s interface will remind you of its namesake, but over the years, they’ve added advanced editing tools like layers, an undo history, a ton of filters, myriad community-created plugins, and a brilliant 3D rotate/zoom function that's handy for recomposing images. It might not have every feature you can dream of, but if your machine is a little underpowered we can't think of a better choice.
Gimp
Limited file export resolution isn't as well known as Paint.net and GIMP, but it's another top-quality free photo editor that's packed with advanced image-enhancing tools. Its interface is smarter and more accessible than GIMP's array of menus and toolbars, with everything arranged in a logical and consistent way. If it's still too intimidating, there's also an optional 'novice' layout that resembles Fotor's filter-based approach. The choice is yours. The 'expert' layout offers both layers and layer masks for sophisticated editing, as well as tools for adjusting curves and levels manually. You can still access the one-click filters via the main menu, but the focus is much more on fine editing.
Photo Pos Pro also includes a clone brush for erasing unwanted blemishes, and there's extra support for batch-editing and scripts to help you save time when refining a whole folder of photos. The free edition of Photo Pos Pro only has one drawback: files can only be saved at a maximum resolution of 1,024 x 2,014 pixels, which might be too small if you're planning to have them printed professionally. If you want to remove this restriction, is available for a license free of £24.50, US$24.90, AU$41.89. Unusual interface might look like a rather simple free photo editor, but take a look at its main menu and you'll find a wealth of features: raw conversion, photo splitting and merging, animated GIF creation, and even a rather odd (but useful) function with which you can print lined, graph or sheet music paper. The meat, of course, is in the photo editing.
PhotoScape's interface is among the most esoteric of all the apps we've looked at here, with tools grouped into pages in odd configurations. It certainly doesn't attempt to ape Photoshop, and includes fewer features. We'd definitely point this towards the beginner, but that doesn't mean you can't get some solid results. PhotoScape's filters are functional and not at all beginner-like, so it's if good choice if you need to quickly level, sharpen or add mild filtering to pictures in a snap. No plugin support is more a photo enhancer than a full-fat manual editing tool. If there's specific area of retouching you need doing with, say, the clone brush or healing tool, you're out of luck. However, if your needs are simple, its stack of high-end filters that really do shine.
There's a foolproof tilt-shift tool, for example, and a raft of vintage and vibrant colour tweaks, all easily accessed through Fotor's clever menu system. You can manually alter your own curves and levels, too, but without the complexity of high-end tools.
Fotor's most brilliant function, and one that's sorely lacking in many photo editing packages, is its batch processing tool – feed it a pile of pics and it'll filter the lot of them in one go, perfect if you have a memory card full of holiday snaps and need to cover up the results of a dodgy camera or shaky hand. On a mobile device? Check out our list of the.
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