What editing software do you use ?

Editing software users

  • Photoshop CS3

    Votes: 24 13.0%
  • Photoshop CS4

    Votes: 44 23.9%
  • Photoshop Elements 7 or 8

    Votes: 33 17.9%
  • Lightroom

    Votes: 75 40.8%
  • GIMP

    Votes: 15 8.2%
  • Corel paint shop pro

    Votes: 14 7.6%
  • ACD Pro

    Votes: 1 0.5%
  • Other (please state)

    Votes: 60 32.6%

  • Total voters
    184

Graham00

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3,145
Name
Graham Mc
Edit My Images
Yes
I'm loving Photoshop Elements 8, why have been using Gimp for over a year when PSE 8 has much better tools and a far bigger range on levels/colour editing, well worth the 40 quid i paid.

What do you use ?
 
Photoshop & AfterEffects CS4. How is this not safe for work? :)
 
Adobe: Photoshop CS5, After Effects CS5, Premiere Pro CS5
Canon Digital Photo Professional

I have Adobe Creative Suite 5 Master Collection, so basically any Adobe program I use, but depends on the job.
 
You haven't included photoshop CS5
 
CS5 + Canon DPP
 
Was using UFraw for base changes and gimp for proper pp. just got CaptureNx to see how that fits in or could improve things.
 
Don't shoot me down but paint.net and gimp depending on what mood i am in
 
RawTherapee for the RAW conversions then Elements 3 (yes, still!) with the Hidden Power add-ons which add a lot of extra functionality.
 
Hassleblad Phocus 2.5 or Canon DPP for Raw conversion.
PSE 8 for editing if needed.
 
Capture One 5, Lightroom 3, CS3 and Elements 7

I tend to favour Capture One 5 for my raw conversions, then any rare post editing is done in either Elements or CS3...so I don't have a clue which one to tick. :shrug: :)
 
CS5 and lightroom 3, using Capture One 5 for my Phase One files.
 
Lightroom 2 and for the occasional bit of clever stuff PSE6!
 
Capture NX, then Elements2 or Photoshop 6.
Downloaded a trial of Lightroom, but couldn't get on with it, I might get Elements 8 next, although I am liking Capture NX more and more for raw file handling so I might go to NX2.
 
Elements 6 and Lightroom 1

Mulling over getting Lightroom 3 courtesy of my student daughter
 
Lightroom (2 at the moment, but will upgrade soon). But before importing them I put them through geosetter to tag them with GPS coordinates. It's a nifty bit of software - you can use GPX files from a gps logger if you have one, or tag directly from a googlemap window built into the software. It is worth doing this before importing to lightroom though as LR sometimes throws a hissy fit when it sees metadata changes to the RAW files themselves.
 
NX2 for raws - then a range of Photoshop CS 2, Lightroom and Photoscape - depending on what I am doing.
 
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