4. The [Register lens aberration correction data] window or [Register peripheral illumination correction data] window appears. Lenses for which correction data is registered in the camera are shown checked.

And to be applied to RAW files by Canon's photo editor, Digital Photo Professional. In which case the camera model may not matter, as long as the lens is supported. (I can't be certain of that in all cases, because RAW formats do tend to be somewhat model-specific.)


Eos Lens Registration Tool Download


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1. (Re)Install DPP 4.11.0.2 from Canon website

2. Delete Canon_Inc_IC folder in C:\ProgramData\

3. Uninstall the Lens Registration tool.

4. Reboot

5. Install DPP 4.10.50 from Canon website ( this will install only the Lens Registration tools )

6. Reboot

7. Execute once DPP as administrator and open a CR2 files which has been shot using an EF lens, even an old file.

8. Use the button beside correction data to open Lens Registration Tools, now it should be going very slow the first time, be patient and then select all the lenses you need before closing the application.

9. From this point onward I can use DPP and Lens Correction with any user account, included the standard ones which are not admin.

I have a Canon 7D and recently found the EOS Lens Registration tool. I've used it to put the profiles of the lenses I own into the camera. That part all makes sense. What I'm more confused about is how useful it is to my particular workflow.

Further, I see there is a setting in the camera's menu for "Raw Image Processing" which appears to use some of the other data from the lens registration, such as lens distortion, chromatic aberration correction, etc. This functionality is not documented in the manual. I think it may have come with a firmware update. (I currently have firmware version 2.0.0 installed. I will probably update it to the latest which I think is 2.0.5 when I have some free time.) (EDIT: Found this feature on their website. It produces a JPEG in-camera in case you want to send directly from camera to customer.)

So is there anything useful I can do with the lens registration data given that I work in RAW and process my photos using Aperture. If I were using either Lightroom or a more modern version of Photoshop would they use the data?

Applications such as Lightroom or Aperture use their own lens correction data. As you have discovered, the data from Canon's Lens Registration Tool is not in a form that can be accessed and used by those other applications.

It may well not be the best raw conversion software for you, but it may also offer far more than you think it does, especially the current version which was a major upgrade from version 3. I personally prefer it for the more precise control it gives over color compared to Adobe Lightroom. You always have the option to export images as 16-bit tiffs before working on them in other applications (which is pretty much the way Adobe Camera Raw does it from within Lr or PS before using many of the other tools available in PS). It's not required to reduce them to jpegs when exporting.

It then gives me a list of lenses with a heading 'Digital Lens Optimizer' from which I can only choose max of 3 lenses. I can choose to edit the list and add more lenses to the list but if I do I can still only choose 3.

But what I really wanted to add to the camera was not the lenses for the Digital Lens Optimizer, but to choose the lenses for which the camera had Aberration Correction data. On the 6D this is straightfoward. I think the 6D had a limit, but it was large, like maybe 30 lenses so that's not a big deal.

Why when I choose the option to register with the camera which lenses will have Aberration Correction data does it bring up a list for me to choose the Digital Lens Optimizer? I want to select a large list of lenses to have aberration correction data, like you used to be able to do with Canon cameras, not just pick which 3 lenses to have DLO.

Yep, the limit is three and there's no explanation why. Because of that I just disabled it and enabled all the other corrections manually. I have more then three lenses so it's more of a burden then an aid. If you shoot RAW it can be applied in post using DPP4.

Yes, I checked, I was using EOS Utility 3, and when I choose the option to Register Lens Aberration Data (or similar such words), I get a dialog to choose 3 lenses for DLO. Not the dialog I get with the 6D which lets me choose which lenses to load the Aberration data for.

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I can't find it either. Maybe the 50 STM is so new their software department didn't have the data yet, or they don't release a new EOS utility software version every time a new lens was released. They probably collect a bunch of new lens data before releasing a new version.

In camera corrections apply to jpegs only. For RAW, you can use the Canon profiles for lens corrections in Canons post processing sw, DPP (the specific module is digital lens optimization, DLO). Most other post processing packages have some lens correction capabilities which may require you to download the profiles for that specific sw. In all cases, YMMV. DLO seems to work well for me.

What if I don't use the Canon's useless software? I presume DPP is Digital Photo Proessional. I use Lightroom myself and it has slew of profiles for lens - are they accurate though? I guess they are user/community made or something, so I am a little worried.

From April 2016 a new system was introduced, which allows the new lenses profiles for Canon cameras and software to be downloaded without needing to update EOS Utility / Digital Photo Professional each time.

- EOS Utility: In Camera settings, when you click [Register lens aberration correction data], the EOS Lens Registration Tool will start up. At that time, if there is new lens data, it will be displayed.

- Digital Photo Professional: When you click [] from the lens correction tool palette, the [Add or Remove lens data] screen (EOS Lens Registration Tool) will be displayed and if there is new lens data, it will be displayed.

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Lens correction data or lens data for Digital Lens Optimizer (DLO) can be added to cameras using [Register lens aberration correction data] if [Correction data not available], [], or [Invalid correction data for Digital Lens Optimizer.] appears on the [Lens aberration correction] screen of cameras you will connect.

A color managed workflow is the cornerstone of any digital photography workflow. I would go so far as to say that a high-end Adobe RGB monitor and a top-notch colorimeter are as important if not more important than what camera and lens you use to capture the image if you care about color.

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