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Capture one styles review6/8/2023 ![]() We’re going back and expanding our earlier releases with free Advanced updates adding new profile-based looks – next up will be the Pro 400 pack (we’re currently shooting test rolls), followed by Portra 400. This method is powerful but less flexible, so we also create ‘classic’ adjustment-based styles too, giving you the best of both worlds. ![]() ![]() Our latest Advanced series styles use custom ICC colour profiles based on our test scans shooting the real film, to get the most accurate colours possible. However, we don’t go barging in messing up all your settings – our styles avoid adjusting the main sliders as much as possible. Our current lineup goes deep, leveraging Capture One’s most advanced features to simulate the look of scanned film realistically. Lightroom has some advantages for developers, for sure, with its robust Creative Presets system, but Capture One dominates when it comes to deep control, image quality and realistic film grain. Completely agree - the styles are as overpriced and ineffectual as could possibly be - I rarely find they work for anything. We started with Capture One and it continues to be our raw editor of choice for professional photography work. Capture One Pro is an impressive piece of software that has a steep learning curve, but do yourself a favour and save the money you would spend on the Styles - just download the free set and leave it at that. Expensive packages that released without even supporting basic layer compatibility. The result? Inconsistent, messy styles, which pulling kinds of crazy slider tricks making it hard to adjust further. ![]() But in the last year or two, a lot of preset companies have realised it’s an expanding market and rushed to get their products ported over to it. Capture One users have never had the same rich third-party ecosystem as Lightroom, sadly.
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