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<font size="+1"><font face="Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif">Background:
I've been in digital photography since 2000, decades of film
before and since. I'm certainly familiar with the use of curves
to correct bad photos. But so tedious, and if the photos are
snapshots, hard to justify the time. It appears to me, although
I can't prove it, that digital cameras, discrete or within
phones, seem to be doing a much better job automatically
adjusting curves than my old Minolta A2, for instance. <br>
<br>
I recently became aware of a new free Canon program, My Image
Garden, that has a much improved Auto-fix than its forerunner.
As an example, a backlit photo processed in MIG will bring up
only the shadows while leaving the normal and highlights alone.
It allegedly uses a zone by zone analysis. It is a terrible
program in every other regard, clunky interface, bloated, etc.
But I used it for some recent pics to advantage. <br>
<br>
Some of those pictures were originally on my Windows Phone 8,
which I had copied to the HD. Before I deleted them from the
phone, I poked around with the options at that point. I found
an auto-fix, pushed the "button," and my jaw dropped.
Literally. A very dark, underexposed shot made perfect! This
feature is within the <i>Nokia</i> programs! It is so good, I
can see myself transferring photos from other sources into the
phone for correction! And it's fast, even so. <br>
<br>
I went back through the digiKam manual and looked on screen, and
I see the old standbys there, but nothing like what I've
experienced with the above. Oh, upon lots of research, I found
a 2007 $40 program called Photoright that upon test, seems to be
doing similar zone adjustments.<br>
<br>
Bottom lines: Are my observations valid? Do you think DK might
get something like this? Oh, yes, all Windows although MIG is
available for Mac. <br>
<br>
Thanks, Paul Verizzo <br>
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