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If anyone has run into this problem and has a solution, would much appreciate knowing what you did.
When I open (in XP) Bridge and look at a set of RAW images (from a Canon 1ds and a Nikon D1x) that have been bracketed over a 7 fstop range, they all look identical on the screen and in ACR 3.1 the histogram for each is evenly spread across the range.
In PS CS (I didn’t uninstall it) the pictures are as they should be. They show up on the screen in the browser and in ACR from very underexposed to overexposed, with the histogram also correct — from bunched on the left to the right.
I’ve gone back through all the color management settings in CS2 and everything is as it should be, and don’t see anything new in CS2 or Bridge or ACR 3.1 that would create this problem — ie., any new option to optimize exposure that I could turn off. And can’t find anything on Adobe’s site that speaks to this.
Must be missing something though. If anybody knows, much appreciated.
Steven
When I open (in XP) Bridge and look at a set of RAW images (from a Canon 1ds and a Nikon D1x) that have been bracketed over a 7 fstop range, they all look identical on the screen and in ACR 3.1 the histogram for each is evenly spread across the range.
In PS CS (I didn’t uninstall it) the pictures are as they should be. They show up on the screen in the browser and in ACR from very underexposed to overexposed, with the histogram also correct — from bunched on the left to the right.
I’ve gone back through all the color management settings in CS2 and everything is as it should be, and don’t see anything new in CS2 or Bridge or ACR 3.1 that would create this problem — ie., any new option to optimize exposure that I could turn off. And can’t find anything on Adobe’s site that speaks to this.
Must be missing something though. If anybody knows, much appreciated.
Steven
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