International
  • PHOTOGRAPHY
  • EMBEDDED IMAGING
  • IMAGE QUALITY
  • CORPORATE
PHOTOGRAPHY > DxO Optics Pro > Exclusive Features > New RAW Converter
  • Exclusive Features
    • Overview
    • New In v5
    • New RAW Converter
    • Optics And Geometry Corrections
    • Sophisticated Lighting
    • Advanced Color Control
    • Powerful Denoising
    • Dust Removal
  • Instant Workflow
    • Overview
    • Hundreds of Images In a Snap
    • DxO Optics Pro's Tour
    • Photoshop Plug-In
    • Integration With Adobe Photoshop Lightroom®
    • Flickr® Export Plug-In
  • Supported Cameras & Lenses
  • Product Range
    • Introduction
    • Functionality
    • Supported Cameras & Lenses
    • Pricing
    • System requirements
  • In The Press
    • Press in English
    • Press in French
    • Press in German
    • Press in Japanese
  • News
  • Overview
  • Available Film Looks
  • Product Benefits
  • DxO Labs Scientific Approach
  • Tell Us What You Think
  • Try It Or Buy It
  • Version History
  • In The Press
  • BUY
  • FREE DEMO
  • ONLINE HELP
    • FAQs & Contact
    • Documents Download
    • Forums
  • LEARNING CENTER
  • Image Masters
  • Newsletter Subscription
  • Resellers
> CONTACT US
> Legal

A new generation RAW converter: Overview

DxO Optics Pro v5’s RAW conversion engine includes a completely new demosaicing engine producing images with much more detail and fewer artifacts, setting a new standard in image quality.

Competitor RAW converters used to generate example images in this page include (in no specific order) Apple Aperture, Adobe Camera RAW 4.1, Nikon Capture NX, SilkyPix, PhaseOne v4 Beta, Bibble

This website requires JavaScript to be enabled and the latest version of the Macromedia Flash Player. If you are you using a browser with JavaScript disabled please enable it now. Otherwise, please update your version of the free Flash Player by downloading here.

Demosaicing is the crucial step of RAW conversion during which the sensor output image (meaningless to the eye since it is made of a particular arrangement of color filters – namely Color Filter Array - used in the image sensor of digital cameras to create a color image) is reconstructed as a visible image for the human eye. The quality of demosaicing determines the amount of detail and artifacts in the final image. Inherently, demosaicing involves trade-offs between image sharpness, details, noise, processing time and conversion artifacts.

Ever since digital images have been shot using sensors with a Color Filter Array, they have been plagued by a number of disgraceful artifacts: false colors, unnatural 2x2 grain, maze like structures for example. These artifacts, particularly visible and unsightly are compounded at high ISO settings and are in large parts responsible for what is deemed the unnatural look of digital images.

Unwilling to live with these problems, DxO took a radical approach and turned a number of classical solutions on their head: Instead of only considering pixels with respect to their direct neighbors, DxO’s new RAW Engine uses a ‘non local’ approach looking much further afar than is usual from each pixel in the image in order to reconstruct detail.

This website requires JavaScript to be enabled and the latest version of the Macromedia Flash Player. If you are you using a browser with JavaScript disabled please enable it now. Otherwise, please update your version of the free Flash Player by downloading here.

 

Click here to read more about RAW conversion...