

Perhaps it would need a more modern Mac than I have if it was to work well. The lag on using a local adjustment brush was several seconds, which makes it completely unusable. ON1: I downloaded a trial recently out of curiosity. I work with Sessions not Catalogs in Capture One (partly because that is how I started out, and I have never got round to getting my head round the Catalog approach).But I also use Media Pro to catalog images. I can't see a need to have multiple apps as alternatives to that - so no need for Pixelmator, etc.

Affinity rather than Photoshop on cost grounds, mainly. Mostly for the inpainting brush to get rid of objects in a picture that would be difficult to do in Capture One (which is after all not a pixel editor). I (occasionally) use Affinity Photo to do a few things that I can't do in Capture One like more extensive cloning and retouching, stitching panoramas, HDR, that kind of thing. It's not that hard just to use the Open with command in Capture One.* If you only occasionally send a raw image to DxO for raw processing, you really don't need a plugin to do so. I'd comment on a few of these as follows. So, what cannot be done in Capture One? Which plugins or external programs are handy to use with Capture One? Topaz Studio - not using, but appears to have interesting tools ON1 Photo Raw - cannot remember why I used this Nik Collection - I use Silver Efex Pro 2 for black and white conversion

Mylio - considering using this to have access to all my photos online Luminar - not using it but they keep promising a DAM to beat all DAMs and they wish that I buy before the DAM is released As far as I can tell, only Lightroom and Capture One can import Aperture libraries.ĭxOÂ OpticsPro - I occasionally use Aperture plugin called Catapult to send raw image to DxOÂ OpticsPr for better raw processingĭxO ViewPoint 3 - used to correct perspective Since I'm migrating, I've looked at many different programs, and keep getting marketing emails badgering me to pay for updates for software that I used with Aperture. I am curious as to what other software people use with Capture One Pro. However there's no manual adjustments I could make.įor this one, I used the 3x3 set of windows as reference points and got much closer to what I really wanted.I am about to jump in and migrate from Aperture to Capture One. Not sure, but I'm guessing the fact that there are bits that have fallen off the building might have thrown Lightroom off. So I tried Lightroom "Full"īut notice, the correction went too far. With the latest version of Lightroom they have some pretty good perspective correction stuff, I took a picture during an URBEX trip to Detroit:
