Dxo pure raw review5/7/2023 ![]() Most of my photos are of people so I don't really want to post them, the one below is from a couple of years ago when I was selling my Canon gear, it was taken at ISO10,000 with the A7 III. I'd encourage anyone to download the one month trial, even if all you use if for is to play with some old RAW files and give your old favourites a new lease of life. I've even started digging out RAW files from my old Canon 750D, and just re-rendering them, the difference is night and day. It doesn't work for everything, scenes that are already detail heavy such as autumn leaves etc can look just excessively sharpened, but for most things I have thrown at it, it is just magic. I got perfectly usable photos at everything up to ISO 20,000. It took about 10 mins to process them all through DxO (Ryzen 7 2700x and GTX 1080ti), and it then even has the option of exporting directly to Lightroom for that easy workflow. ![]() I took my 25 photos and ran them through DxO, and imported the original RAW's and the enhanced DNG's into Lightroom, did my usual noise removal to the standard ones, and nothing at all to the enhanced. I can usually achieve this fairly comfortably at anything up to ISO 3,200, and I've been happy with that for the last few years. I use a 28" 4k monitor for editing, and my target is generally that I don't want to see any noise when it is full screen, so about 8mp of just pure clean detail. I have an A7 III, paired with my Sigma 24-70 f2.8, and I shot about 25 photos of my daughter at everything from ISO 100 to ISO 204,000. I watched some youtube videos and downloaded a trial of DxO PureRaw to see what it is all about, and it has blown me away. One of the things I like to think I've gotten pretty good at over the years is getting rid of noise in Lightroom whilst keeping a healthy degree of sharpness and detail, nothing worse than that plastic face look.
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