![]() For instance, maybe my exposure adjustment was OK when looked at each photo individually, but once stitched together it looks not OK. I don’t have to “guess” how it’ll look across the whole panorama if I can preview my result at once. Why not adjusting each file individually and export 3 JPG for later stitching in another software? Easy answer: because the fact that I can directly view an on-screen rendered version of the stitching helps me (a lot!) making some decisions. Most photographers won’t need anything more than what Lightroom offers, but it’s still a bonus that ON1 provides all three. Then, you would render the 3 RAW files as per DxO usual process at the same time (so yes, 3 times the CPU power if you wonder) and only then, for pure on-screen display, do the stitching of the 3 rendered bitmap files (merging and auto-alignment). Impressively, ON1 Photo RAW 2020 has all three of these features, while Lightroom only has HDR and panorama stitching, so no focus stacking. Learn the ins and outs of the features available with the panorama. Local adjustments? On the one file where the local adjustments took place. A quick overview video about blending panoramic photos together with ON1 Photo RAW 2018. RAW stitching means than all modifications (exposure, WB, etc.) will be performed on each of those 3 RAW files individually. Assume the final panorama is issued from 3 RAW files. And, I would like focus stacking, la Helicon and panorama stitching, too. RAW stitching does not mean that the result is a RAW file. ON1 RAW is very young and doesnt come close to C1s demosaicing ability. And think that there’s a misunderstanding. ![]()
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