I'm curious, does anyone here use ACDsee's Photo Studio? it compliments Affinity Photo nicely. I think of Photo Studio as being analogous to LightRoom and Affinity Photo to PhotoShop. Photo Studio has excellent DAM management capabilities, and a very fast database. I have hundreds of thousands of photos and videos cataloged, and I can search for media by name or metadata and get results in seconds. Unlike LightRoom, it integrates with the file system well (Windows 10). I also perform a lot of batch development and editing using Photo Studio, but do any heaving lifting in Affinity Photo, such as compositing or merging or stacking.

I tried ACD Photo the number one thing for me which is a deal breaker is the search capability. In comparison to the popup panel in Aperture, it's extremely weak. If you haven't seen it, here's a sample screen shot. I can add any number of arbitrary rules, dates, etc. This is very useful as I have photographed certain things and places several times over the years. It really is the best photo search panel I've used.


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Lomography's LomoChrome '92 is designed to mimic the look of classic drugstore film that used to fill family photo albums. As we discovered, to shoot with it is to embrace the unexpected, from strange color shifts to odd textures and oversized grain.

The LowePro PhotoSport Outdoor is a camera pack for photographers who also need a well-designed daypack for hiking and other outdoor use. If that sounds like you, the PhotoSport Outdoor may be a great choice, but as with any hybrid product, there are a few tradeoffs.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

Organizing your images is crucial. This is something that I struggled with when I first started in photography, and it caused a few problems. After shooting for a whole day, it can be tedious and tiresome to have to transfer all of your files to a computer and then back up all of the images too. Creating all the folders and having to sort through all the files is probably one of the more boring things to do. Fortunately, ACDSee does make this process a little easier.

I was an early adopter of ACDC since version 3. I'll never buy their software again. They do not cater to professional photographers and here's why... You cannot even view raw files of a new camera until they put out a raw update. Do you know how long it takes him to put out a raw update for a new camera? 8 months to a year. Then when the new update comes out they miraculously have a new version of the software which you have to purchase to get the new RAW update. I own acdsee studio "Pro" 2018 and it will not read raw files for the Sony a7III. The a7iii came out in April of 2018. No RAW updates FOR THE a7III from acdsee until version 2019 came out. So unless I upgrade to version 2019 8 months after the camera came out I can't even view the raw files. Rubbish!

NOTE: Jumping ahead a bit, I will show you what I mean about white balance and black and white photography. Notice how adjusting this one setting that is seemingly unrelated to black and white conversion (from around 2450K degrees to our chosen 5500K) changes the overall look of the image.

is a photographer based in Vilnius, Lithuania. With a degree in visual arts, he spent a few years writing photography and art-related articles before fully immersing himself in intimate artistic portraiture, preferring a documentary approach. Romanas is exploring solitude, quietness and human vulnerability through environmental portraits of self and others. You can find his personal work on Instagram, while most of his commercial work can be found on his current website.

I use the filtering features a lot while culling photos or trying to select out specific ones. Key commands like CTRL + 1 to 5 give a selected photo or photos the given rating that, in turn, can be shown alone. There are also colors you can apply. Here is a collection of screen captures that shows off some of the options there. There are a few other additions along with textual search capability.

There are the usual adjustments like exposure, contrast, vibrance, saturation, fill light, and a lot more. You can apply a lot of those adjustments with a paintbrush tool or a gradient tool, which is great when adjusting the brightness of the sky or ground in relation to the other. These adjustments have 8 layers available that you can use and effectively stack to make adjustments of adjustments. There are the usual adjustment for aligning the horizon, resizing the crop, changing the aspect ratio, and applying lens related adjustments. There is a repair tool to clean up things like sensor dust and skin blemishes. I often use it as a first-pass on photos of people to make that initial skin cleanup. The best part here is that all of these edits are non-destructive and stored at the image database/xmp file level.

It's been many years since we last took a look at ACDSee, but clearly, it's time we rectified that. A fully-featured image management and editing tool aimed specifically at photographers, Photo Studio Ultimate 2021 provides most of the same core features as its Adobe rival. It also includes some that Lightroom lacks, the most notable of which is support for layer-based editing.

ACDSee Photo Studio Ultimate 2021 has a modal interface with five main sections that can be selected at the top-right corner of the screen: Manage, Photos, View, Customize and Edit. Further right, you'll find several icons through which you can sign up for an optional ACDSee 365 subscription, including cloud storage and access to several other apps, view statistics about your photos and the overall database, and view any messages from ACDSee.

The other key difference is that there's much more hand-holding in this mode, which will help less experienced photographers get the results they're after. In Develop mode, a few controls do offer automatic modes. Still, there are more auto controls on offer in Edit mode, and some tools also have multiple versions offering different levels of complexity (and, of course, varying levels of control as well.)

To do so, I set ACDSee's flagship app the task of cataloging the bulk of my photo collection, which I first copied onto a blank WD My Book external hard drive. It contains around 2.5 terabytes of data in all, including more than 150,000 images from nearly 200 cameras, of which around 50,000 are in a wide range of different raw formats. And as well as all the stills, there's also a small number of videos, which I also had it catalog.

It took a day or so for Photo Studio Ultimate to finish the job of cataloging all the photos; once it was done adding them to its database and creating a whopping eight gigabytes of thumbnails, performance was excellent.

The program still launches in around four or five seconds, and while it takes a rather sluggish 25 seconds to open Photos mode or 40-45 seconds to first switch to the root folder of the photo library in Manage mode, that's the only time it feels slow. Once it's done, browsing is instant or very close to it.

There's no delay at all as you browse from folder to folder and scroll through thumbnails in Manage mode. Even in Photos mode, which presents every photo in the database as a single, scrollable list of thumbnails grouped by capture date, the thumbnails all appear within a second or less as you scroll through your library.

Searching for photos tagged by face recognition as containing a specific individual in that library took just 17 seconds to return almost 700 results. And adjusting most sliders in develop mode delivered previews that were real-time or very close to it.

ACDSee's face recognition algorithms can detect and identify faces not only when unobscured and looking towards the camera but also in profile view or when partially hidden behind another object. Faces aren't detected when the photo is first imported into the database. Instead, the algorithms run when manually triggered or, by default, in the background when your computer is left idle in Manage mode.

After manually tagging another 150 photos of my son's mum, I found that some of her suggestions included the same cat, several more Ferrari logos, a smiley face, a bearded man, a DPReview business card, a menu/OK button on a digital camera, an oyster on the half shell and more.

When cataloging my roughly two-terabyte photo library, everything went fine for around the first 40,000 photos imported into ACDSee's database. From that point on, I would get a crash and forced close of the app approximately once every 10,000 images. (Curiously, ACDSee also imported the final 40,000 images without a crash.)

I also discovered that after launching the program with my removable media disconnected, then closing, reconnecting the drive, and relaunching, ACDSee incorrectly flagged most of my photos as orphaned. Yet if I double-clicked on the thumbnail of a supposedly orphaned image, it would instantly open without issue, and then its thumbnail would update to show it as unorphaned once more.

But as I noted, these issues likely relate in part to the size of my photo library, and I didn't see similar behavior with smaller libraries or when using a non-removable drive. That wasn't true of another face-detection bug I discovered, however. If you rotate an image that already has faces detected in it, the frames for any detected faces are then shown in the wrong area of the image. ff782bc1db

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