Important Note: Make sure to view at 1:1 when adjusting things like sharpening and noise reduction, or the scaling and previewing system that Capture One uses will distort your results and you won’t get an accurate representation of your changes. With that in mind here are the settings I suggest you change. While some people might not care about this, or even prefer it, I like to have my images looking as natural as possible. The result is a significant amount of over sharpening. In particular the sharpening is way too high, as it treats it like a normal DNG. To optimise your iPhone raw photos in Capture One, you’ll need to change some of the default settings. While there is no major distortion to worry about there is some heavy vignetting, and this isn’t compensated for, but you can fix this pretty easily. Secondly, there is no lens profiles either. There is no camera profiles, and instead it relies not he generic DNG file. The DNG files are read inside of Capture One perfectly fine, but there are a few caveats. For the purposes of this article, I was using RAW files from my iPhone XR. Inside of Capture One, the software supports the iPhone images from most recent iPhones. Whatever you use, once you get the RAW files onto your computer, you can import them into Capture One just as you would any other photo. In this case you will need to use Lightroom on the desktop to get the RAW files out of the software. I normally use the camera app inside Adobe Lightroom Mobile, as this in my opinion, is one of the best options, especially as it syncs to the Adobe cloud. This will either end up on the camera roll in the Photos app, or depending on the App you may be able to export it to files or dropbox. If you use an app that shoots RAW on your iPhone, and there are many, you will get a DNG file as the outputted format.
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January 2023
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