RAW files contain RAW data from Photosites not RGB Pixels. Only if you Export as original will Lightroom give your an unprocessed RAW HeliconFocus must demosiac and render RGB pixels before it can process the in focus pixels. I am not sure what Lightroom is exporting to Helicon Focus though. Helicon Focus will read RAW file formats. Just trying at random to draw a circle around the issue to narrow it down.Ĭlick to expand.This may be your problem. If this works, it would seem to indicate the failure is on the import not on the file contents. If that yields no useful result, delete the files and start over but this time when you import, put the files in different folders before importing, and import one by one. Do all three move properly, separately? This would indicate if LR has attached the right physical file to the right catalog pointer. Once all three are imported and appear the same (but with different names), drag and drop (inside of LR) each file to a different folder, one by one, while watching the file in Explorer to see that it moves. But it might be worth trying an experiment: If there's some crossover, LR will likely show its confusion in file movement. That does not sound like your issue though. drag and drop) that resulted in naming conflicts. It was years ago and I can't recall exactly what did it, but it was related to file movement (e.g. I've seen lightroom get its pointers confused internally, where two master files pointed to the same physical file. Sorry, I need a big sign on my computer "don't answer posts after midnight", I missed that. Tiffs look "normal (different)", JPEGS look "normal (different)". On all THREE of the Windows 10 systems I have done this on, across every version of Lightroom I've ever tried it on, they look exactly the same. Do they look as different as they actually are, or do all three look the same? In Library, open the 3 images in Loupe view. dng.Įxit from Helicon Focus back to Lightroom and you'll now import 3 images, 1 with ALL the images rendered in Method B, one with ALL the images rendered in Method C, which will look VERY different than Method B, and one with only part of the stack (8 images worth) that is sharp, rendered in Method B, which will look extremely different than either of the others. STILL STAYING in Helicon Focus, select all the images but the first 8, and UNCHECK them. As you're likely aware, it's a LOT faster to do this than to export from Lightroom every time. STAY in Helicon and change the method to C, set smoothing to 2 and render again. Once there, render the stack in Method B, using the default radius (8) and smoothing (4). Presumably they're shot in RAW, imported into Lightroom, then sent in RAW to Helicon Focus. Take one of your stacks - maybe a small one with 20 or 30 images. Take one of your stacks - I don't know what a GFX 100 is, but presuming you're doing focus stacks by changing focus. The only thing that DOESN'T know they're different, no matter what I've done (1:1 previews, read metadata, do the hokey-pokey) is Lightroom. Even Affinity Photo knows they're different. Photoshop when I send them from Lightroom knows they're different. Faststone Viewer knows they're different. I can take 19 images and render them, then take a 7 image subset that only has the first 1/3 of the image sharp and render it - so now they're not SLIGHTLY different, they're HUGELY different, and when I get back into Lightroom, it displays them as the same. It's actually WORSE than not recognizing the differences in two files rendered from the same image set. dng files are different and display them correctly. They haven't been touched.Įxport anything doesn't make sense. I can create 1:1 previews and they STILL don't get shown as different in Lightroom. I can "read" the metadata, but there's no mismatch so it doesn't make any difference. They're different files with different names and different contents.
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