

The tool has four sliders – Highlight, Shadow, White, and Black – that each cover a specific tonal range. This is especially true in the highlighted area where the detail in for example a bride’s white dress might look burned out at first sight, but actually has plenty of image information to work with. The tool works best with raw files because of their large dynamic range where you can retrieve unseen image detail. Not only is it now even more useful for recovering details in the shadows or highlights, but you can also control the brightness of four different tone ranges, making it an awesome tool for adjusting contrast with ease and creating a look for your images.

The High Dynamic Range tool has received a substantial overhaul in Capture One 20. I chose the chapter that covers the High Dynamic Range tool that is fundamentally renewed in Capture One 20. Now, let’s start reading the book… Recovering details and adding contrast with High Dynamic Range This way you can experience first hand what this book has to offer. Nils Christoffersen allowed me to publish a part of his book in a post on the Image Alchemist. You can get your copy here (affiliate link to Capture One 21 guide).
#CAPTURE ONE PRO 7 BOOKS CODE#
With discount code alchemist4 this book is yours for US$ 15. The e-book sells for US$ 19 and comes in PDF, ePub, Mobi for Kindle formats. Within a month of Capture One 20’s release, Nils Wille Christoffersen released an updated version of his already well-known Capture One guide, the Photographer’s Guide to Capture One 20. I highly recommend this e-book as a reference guide for all users of Capture One 20 and earlier versions. And it is also frequently kept up to date with all changes in Capture One. It is one of the best resources on the market today. The ‘Photographer’s guide to Capture One 20’ is a thorough and comprehensive reference guide for every user of Capture One.
