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Re: Any Minolta/Sony users ...

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SubjectRe: Any Minolta/Sony users using UFRaw and GIMP?
Fromnospam
Date04/06/2014 08:44 (04/06/2014 02:44)
Message-ID<060420140244451753%nospam@nospam.invalid>
Client
Newsgroupsrec.photo.digital
FollowsFloyd L. Davidson
FollowupsEric Stevens (2h & 38m)

In article <87fvlroztb.fld@apaflo.com>, Floyd L. Davidson <floyd@apaflo.com>wrote:

Alan Browne
And as time goes on and the capability set of Photoshop increases more quickly than the Gimp's poor record of catching up ... well...

Floyd L. Davidson
Tell us about how great it is to have only a choice between "bicubic sharper" and "bicubic smoother" for filters when resampling an image either down for the web or up for printing!

tell us how great it is to not have adjustment layers, non-destructive workflow and the inability to use a wealth of plug-ins that can do whatever you want, for starters.

Alan Browne
One exercise, optimally sharpening (USM) a finished image, is but one of many examples I can use to show that the Gimp is a poor user experience for photographers. Yes - you can achieve the desired end for many things - just not as quickly or efficiently as in PS. (and yes, sufficient cherry picking will fine exceptions).

Floyd L. Davidson
You can't get sharpening quit right using Photoshop.

nonsense.

But with GIMP it is possible to combine, in proportions of the users choice, Wavelet sharpening, High Pass sharpening, Unsharp Mask, and Richardson-Lucy Deconvolutional sharpening.

nothing about photoshop prevents that.

Photoshop is fine if you are willing to settle for "good enough", but if you know the difference you'll get between *proper* application of USM, HP sharpen and RL sharpen there is no comparison.

more nonsense.

Eric Stevens (2h & 38m)