Adobe Camera Raw and Photoshop CS3 – support for Panasonic DMC LX3 ?

A
Posted By
Alex
Feb 27, 2009
Views
951
Replies
11
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Closed
Hello all,
I cannot work on the raw files from the Panasonic DMC LX3 using Adobe Bridge/Adobe Photoshop CS3.
There is a CameraRaw plug-in with version 4.6 — this doesn’t recognize LX3 raw files as is expected.
The plug-in version 5.2 is not working with CS3.

What can I do to get started without having to upgrade to CS4? Is there another Raw plug-in that handles LX3 raw files?
Greetings, Alex

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T
tconway
Feb 27, 2009
"Alex" wrote in message
Hello all,
I cannot work on the raw files from the Panasonic DMC LX3 using Adobe Bridge/Adobe Photoshop CS3.
There is a CameraRaw plug-in with version 4.6 — this doesn’t recognize LX3
raw files as is expected.
The plug-in version 5.2 is not working with CS3.

What can I do to get started without having to upgrade to CS4? Is there another
Raw plug-in that handles LX3 raw files?
Greetings, Alex
Convert the RAW file to DNG and open the DNG in photoshop. Check out this site for explanation.

http://www.barrypearson.co.uk/articles/dng/ps_cs.htm
MR
Mike Russell
Feb 27, 2009
On Fri, 27 Feb 2009 15:21:08 GMT, Alex wrote:

Hello all,
I cannot work on the raw files from the Panasonic DMC LX3 using Adobe Bridge/Adobe Photoshop CS3.
….
What can I do to get started without having to upgrade to CS4? Is there another Raw plug-in that handles LX3 raw files?
Greetings, Alex

Use Adobe’s free DNG converter to convert your LX3 files to DNG format. The DNG files are compatible with CS3 Camera Raw.

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/cameraraw.html

The LX3, and a few other cameras, produce DNG files that are three times the file size of the original raw file, so another reasonable work flow would be to use the raw converter that came with your camera, and save as a tiff file, and then read that directly into Photoshop.

Mike Russell – http://www.curvemeister.com
A
Alex
Feb 27, 2009
Mike Russell wrote:
<snip>
Use Adobe’s free DNG converter to convert your LX3 files to DNG format. The DNG files are compatible with CS3 Camera Raw.

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/cameraraw.html

The LX3, and a few other cameras, produce DNG files that are three times the file size of the original raw file, so another reasonable work flow would be to use the raw converter that came with your camera, and save as a tiff file, and then read that directly into Photoshop.

Hello Tconway, Mike Russell,

DNG converter 4.0 does indeed make the huge DNG file, but this file is incompatible with CS3. I see there is a version 5.2 and I will try that after a good night’s rest!
Thank you both for pointing me in tis direction.
Greetings, Alex
J
Joel
Feb 28, 2009
Alex wrote:

Mike Russell wrote:
<snip>
Use Adobe’s free DNG converter to convert your LX3 files to DNG format. The DNG files are compatible with CS3 Camera Raw.

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/cameraraw.html

The LX3, and a few other cameras, produce DNG files that are three times the file size of the original raw file, so another reasonable work flow would be to use the raw converter that came with your camera, and save as a tiff file, and then read that directly into Photoshop.

Hello Tconway, Mike Russell,

DNG converter 4.0 does indeed make the huge DNG file, but this file is incompatible with CS3. I see there is a version 5.2 and I will try that after a good night’s rest!
Thank you both for pointing me in tis direction.
Greetings, Alex

I have never tried DNG myself but what you say sounds opposite of what I have read about DNG. Or what I read something like

DNG = small universal RAW format.

DNG = I believe DNG stands for "Digital Negative Graphic" or something like that which means it’s an Universal RAW format.

But I may misread it?
JJ
John J
Feb 28, 2009
Joel wrote:

DNG = I believe DNG stands for "Digital Negative Graphic" or something like that which means it’s an Universal RAW format.

But I may misread it?

Digital Negative is good enough. For those who need a touchstone to begin to understand it, the structure of DNG is very much like an extended TIFF format, but not interchangeable.

It is intended as an open source model standard that manufacturers may adopt. Eventually I think they will. Even Nikon has to awaken to the fact that it is a hardware maker, and locking things into proprietary formats is a dead-end.
R
Rob
Feb 28, 2009
John J wrote:
Joel wrote:

DNG = I believe DNG stands for "Digital Negative Graphic" or something
like that which means it’s an Universal RAW format.

But I may misread it?

Digital Negative is good enough. For those who need a touchstone to begin to understand it, the structure of DNG is very much like an extended TIFF format, but not interchangeable.

It is intended as an open source model standard that manufacturers may adopt. Eventually I think they will. Even Nikon has to awaken to the fact that it is a hardware maker, and locking things into proprietary formats is a dead-end.

Nikon are in their right to withhold propriety information which they have developed like any other company. if Nikon think its the way to process an image to obtain better results so be it, not give away that info to other manufactures,

Let me put it another way why doesn’t Adobe supply free to Nikon the processing software for Nikon hardware? would be cheaper for Nikon then look at the problems that would cause. 🙂
A
Alex
Feb 28, 2009
Alex wrote:
Mike Russell wrote:
<snip>
Use Adobe’s free DNG converter to convert your LX3 files to DNG format. The DNG files are compatible with CS3 Camera Raw.

http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop/cameraraw.html

The LX3, and a few other cameras, produce DNG files that are three times the file size of the original raw file, so another reasonable work flow would be to use the raw converter that came with your camera, and save as a tiff file, and then read that directly into Photoshop.

Hello Tconway, Mike Russell,

DNG converter 4.0 does indeed make the huge DNG file, but this file is incompatible with CS3. I see there is a version 5.2 and I will try that after a
good night’s rest!
Thank you both for pointing me in tis direction.
Greetings, Alex

It remains a mystery!
DNG converter 5.2 indeed handles LX3 raw files (as version 4.0 did), but they do not open directly in PS CS3. I first have to locate them with Bridge CS3; then they can be opened in Camera Raw, which then can save them as JPG. Not really an easy way to do the conversion.

I seem to remember that DNG files could be opened directly in PS CS3, e.g. by dropping them onto the CS3 window. But this is now not the case.

I should have read Barry Pearson’s page first I suppose! Greetings, Alex
A
Alex
Feb 28, 2009
"tconway" wrote:
"Alex" wrote in message
Hello all,
I cannot work on the raw files from the Panasonic DMC LX3 using Adobe Bridge/Adobe Photoshop CS3.
There is a CameraRaw plug-in with version 4.6 — this doesn’t recognize LX3
raw files as is expected.
The plug-in version 5.2 is not working with CS3.

What can I do to get started without having to upgrade to CS4? Is there another
Raw plug-in that handles LX3 raw files?
Greetings, Alex
Convert the RAW file to DNG and open the DNG in photoshop. Check out this site for explanation.

http://www.barrypearson.co.uk/articles/dng/ps_cs.htm

I think I have foud it! There is also PS Elements 7 on my system and it had also a CameraRaw plug-in – but this time 5.2. After moving it to a harmless place, everything seems OK.

ACRchecker nevertheless doesn’t find any ACR plug-in! Why?

I have a new question: are PS CS3 as well as PSE 7.0 allowed to reside on the same computer? Can they have different versions of ACR ? Greetings, Alex
A
Alex
Feb 28, 2009
"tconway" wrote:
"Alex" wrote in message
Hello all,
I cannot work on the raw files from the Panasonic DMC LX3 using Adobe Bridge/Adobe Photoshop CS3.
There is a CameraRaw plug-in with version 4.6 — this doesn’t recognize LX3
raw files as is expected.
The plug-in version 5.2 is not working with CS3.

What can I do to get started without having to upgrade to CS4? Is there another
Raw plug-in that handles LX3 raw files?
Greetings, Alex
Convert the RAW file to DNG and open the DNG in photoshop. Check out this site for explanation.

http://www.barrypearson.co.uk/articles/dng/ps_cs.htm

I think I have foud it! There is also PS Elements 7 on my system and it had also a CameraRaw plug-in – but this time 5.2. After moving it to a harmless place, everything seems OK.

ACRchecker nevertheless doesn’t find any ACR plug-in! Why?

I have a new question: are PS CS3 as well as PSE 7.0 allowed to reside on the same computer? Can they have different versions of ACR ? Greetings, Alex
JJ
John J
Feb 28, 2009
Rob wrote:
John J wrote:
Joel wrote:

DNG = I believe DNG stands for "Digital Negative Graphic" or something
like that which means it’s an Universal RAW format.

But I may misread it?

Digital Negative is good enough. For those who need a touchstone to begin to understand it, the structure of DNG is very much like an extended TIFF format, but not interchangeable.

It is intended as an open source model standard that manufacturers may adopt. Eventually I think they will. Even Nikon has to awaken to the fact that it is a hardware maker, and locking things into proprietary formats is a dead-end.

Nikon are in their right to withhold propriety information which they have developed like any other company.

Well of course it is there right. No sane person would suggest otherwise. Unfortunately, their hidden data only serves to suggest that they are using in-camera pre-processing to hide faults in their lenses. That’s the risk one takes with obscurity.

Let me put it another way why doesn’t Adobe supply free to Nikon the processing software for Nikon hardware? would be cheaper for Nikon then look at the problems that would cause. 🙂

Silliest thing I’ve read for weeks.
MR
Mike Russell
Mar 1, 2009
On Sat, 28 Feb 2009 13:54:27 GMT, Alex wrote:

ACRchecker nevertheless doesn’t find any ACR plug-in! Why?

My bad – there is a new version of the code in AcrChecker that deals with the more recent releases of Photohsop and Elements. I just need to button it all up and make a new release

Mike Russell – http://www.curvemeister.com

MacBook Pro 16” Mockups 🔥

– in 4 materials (clay versions included)

– 12 scenes

– 48 MacBook Pro 16″ mockups

– 6000 x 4500 px

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