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RAW images look darker

New Here ,
Oct 12, 2021 Oct 12, 2021

When I open an image in Adobe Camera Raw the image looks darker than when I open it in different programms.

I uploaded the same image once screenshotted from Canon Photo Professionals 4 and one from Camera raw.

Why do they not look the same? I changed my raw standards to the camera settings. Before that some pictures just look a lot more bland. Now it is better but still darker than usual. 

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Community Expert , Oct 12, 2021 Oct 12, 2021

Remember that it's exactly the same sensor data. The image isn't really "darker".

 

For camera manufacturers it's a selling point to push the default rendering as much as possible. The brighter image always wins in the store. And then they design their software to match the in-camera rendering.

 

ACR's default settings are conservative. But nothing stops you from increasing the exposure slider to the same level. It's the same data! Nothing bad happens.

 

It's a very common misunderstanding that

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LEGEND ,
Oct 12, 2021 Oct 12, 2021

What other raw converters?

Not at all unexpected that different raw converters render the same raw differently.

Author “Color Management for Photographers" & "Photoshop CC Color Management/pluralsight"
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Community Expert ,
Oct 12, 2021 Oct 12, 2021

Remember that it's exactly the same sensor data. The image isn't really "darker".

 

For camera manufacturers it's a selling point to push the default rendering as much as possible. The brighter image always wins in the store. And then they design their software to match the in-camera rendering.

 

ACR's default settings are conservative. But nothing stops you from increasing the exposure slider to the same level. It's the same data! Nothing bad happens.

 

It's a very common misunderstanding that there is such a thing as an "original" raw image. There isn't; the sensor data always have to be processed and interpreted to produce a recognizable image. Interpretations vary, but Adobe don't need to impress anyone with an immediately "appealing" image. That part is up to you.

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New Here ,
Oct 13, 2021 Oct 13, 2021
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Thank you, that explains a lot! 

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