


To help you correct lens artifacts DxO will download the appropriate Optic Module (or lens profile), even for 14 year old photos such as this. The editing work in PhotoLab is carried out in the Customize window, but there's also a PhotoLibrary window where you can browse all your images, carry out basic searches using camera shooting information and keywords and even create Projects (albums). It's also possible to create Virtual Copies to try out multiple 'looks' without having to keep duplicating the original image. When you're happy with the image you can then export a processed TIFF or JPEG version. You an also access different metering settings such as Highlight Priority or Center-weighted Average using as drop down menu.Īll of PhotoLab's adjustments are non-destructive, so you can go back later and change them at any time. You can then fine-tune the results by selectively tweaking sliders for the Highlights, Midtones and Shadows as you would in many other image editing apps. The app then tweaks the shot’s exposure to prioritize details in the selected areas. After clicking the panel’s Spot Weighted button you can draw a marquee over the area (or areas) that are most important. PhotoLab 4’s Light panel has a useful Smart Lighting feature that does a similar job. Photographers often use spot metering to prioritize the exposure for a particular part of the scene (such as a bright sky or a building in shadow).
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You can also adjust a specific area using manual brushes, which enables you to selectively dodge (lighten) or burn (darken) particular areas with great precision (like an old school analogue dark room photographer), but PhotoLab also uses auto-masking 'control points' inherited from DxO's takeover of the Nik Collection.
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One of most useful equalizer sliders is ClearView Plus (Elite edition only), which uses localised contrast adjustments to cut through atmospheric haze and give flat-looking pictures much more contrast. (Image credit: George Cairns/Digital Camera World)Īfter applying a selective adjustment you can tweak a range of properties via a clever multi-function equalizer that sits next to the area that you’re working on.

Here we’re using ClearView Plus to claw back more detail in distant haze. Local adjustments such as Control Points enable you to target a specific region and tweak a host of properties.
