Can LR show custom camera profiles

Can LR represent the user defined picture styles?
Canon 7D
user def 1
user def 2
user def 3

No, Lightroom doesn't read settings in your camera apart from white balance when using raw files. For jpegs that information is already baked into the file.
There are a selection of profiles that imitate standard camera options though.
You can of course make your own to match your custom in camera settings.
The tool is here: http://labs.adobe.com/wiki/index.php/DNG_Profiles:Editor

Similar Messages

  • Can't load custom camera profiles

    I'm using both Lightroom 3.5 and Photoshop CS5 on a 64-bit Windowx XP-Pro system with 8GB of RAM and plenty of disk space.
    I use an X-rite color checker to generate custom camera profiles whenever I do portraits or other color critical photo sessions. The camera profile is generally placed in the
    "Documents and Settings\...{user...}Application Data\Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles " folder.
    When I try to apply a profile in either lightroom or ACR the newely created profile is not visible in the camera profile drop-down box. When I check to see if the profile exists in the appropriate folder, it does.
    I've used color profiles before and have always been able to create and select a profile. Now I'm no longer able to do this. I would prefer to not re-install all my Adobe software since then I'd have to reinstall all the updates and plug-ins.
    How can I get lightroom and ACR to see these profiles and use them?

    OK I figured out my problem and it seems as though it was a combination of things.
    First: The X-Rite color checker can't create a profile if any of the color channels in the image are clipped. Adjusting the exposure via Camera Raw/Lightroom and saving the file as a DNG doesn't help since the changes are in metadata and not the actual raw file. I tried converting the file to a TIF after making the exposure adjustment then to a DNG, this allowed me to then save it as a DNG which the X-Rite software then allowed me to create a custom profile without errors. This new profile however, was not visible from the Camera Calibration menu.  The reason for this is that in the actual .dcp file, instead of having the camera type specified, it had TIF.
    Second: The imbedded camera type (Canon 5D, Nikon D90, etc.) in the profile has to match the camera type in the metadata of the image you're trying to apply the profile to. Apparently, Lightroom/ACR, only allows you to see profiles that match the images taken by the same camera type. This makes sense since my two different bodies have different profiles. If you shoot with two different bodies you need to apply the profiles separately in lightroom. You need to sort the images by camera type then apply/sync the camera profile applicable to each camera seperately.
    Third: I figured out a solution to the issue of my overexposed color checker, but unless your are comfortable with editing the binary .dcp file with a binary editor, I suggest you add  1/2 to a full stop when shooting the color checker. The problem is that red typically clips before any other color and since your meter does an 18% average (including the incident meter in the studio), it's possible to clip Red while Green and Blue are fine.

  • I can't load custom camera profiles into Lightroom 4.3?

    I have googled this found some posts about puting it under the Users folder. However I don't have a library under my username it comes under a folder called Shared.
    I'm using a Mac computer
    I placed my custom profiles in there , however it still won't work.
    Can anyone offer any help in the matter?

    Yes, it won't work if you put them in a folder called Shared.  It's looking in this location: Macintosh HD / Users / [your username] / Library / Application Support / Adobe / CameraRaw / CameraProfiles /
    There should be a Library folder under your username - I've never heard of a Mac install without one (i.e. as far as I know, the Mac OS won't work).  It's a hidden folder though.

  • Created custom camera profile in DNG editor and can't find it in LR

    I have created custom camera profiles and can't find them in Lightroom 3. Can someone help? I'm a Mac user.
    David

    I figured it out. I saved the profile, but I did not export it.
    Thanks for the help everyone.
    I was primarily interested in doing a custom tone curve to match my Mark IV to my 5D. The results were really bad, so I re did the profiles to simply get close colors, and I used the Point Tone Curve to match the two cameras. I've always liked the tone curve from the 5D, and I've always hated the one on the Mark IV.
    Problem Solved.
    Thanks again.
    David

  • Q: Custom camera profiles and process 2010 - incompatible?

    I have two digital cameras that I've had modified to shoot in the infrared.  I have to use custom camera profiles (created with the DNG profile editor) when I import IR images, otherwise the custom white balance is not preserved correctly.  However, even though the Develop module shows that the process is 2010 for my IR images, the Detail and Contrast sliders under Noise Reduction are grayed out.
    I read somewhere on the web that custom camera profiles used on import effectively negate the ability to use the new features in process 2010 - can anyone confirm this, or otherwise explain why I'm not able to use the Noise Reduction features of process 2010 in their entirety?
    Thanks much.

    sandrift71 wrote:
    I have two digital cameras that I've had modified to shoot in the infrared.  I have to use custom camera profiles (created with the DNG profile editor) when I import IR images, otherwise the custom white balance is not preserved correctly.  However, even though the Develop module shows that the process is 2010 for my IR images, the Detail and Contrast sliders under Noise Reduction are grayed out.
    Even with the amounts at non-zero values?

  • Where to store custom camera profiles on a MacBook Pro 17" OS X 10.8.5

    I recently created custom camera profiles for a friend's Nikon D700 using the Adobe DNG Profile Editor. She does not know where to install or store the dcp files so they can be used when she converts her RAW files. She is using Photoshop CS6 on a MacBook Pro 17" with OS X 10.8.5. I created the profiles on a PC. Can anyone help?

    See this link - the location for custom Camera Profiles for LR and ACR is the same:
    http://members.lightroomqueen.com/Knowledgebase/Article/View/1373/205/lightroom-5-default- locations

  • How can I create a camera profile in LR4 from my camera

    I have a 5d mark 2, and I created a custom camera profile that is ideal for me, however when I shoot raw it only gives me the adobe, and camera standards etc. Is there a way that I can take my user setting on my 5d and transfer it into lightroom??

    The camera profiles are only applied to the in-camera JPGs, never to the Raw files.
    This is not only so for your Canon but for every camera that shoots Raw.
    For creating a camera profile in Lr, see here:
    http://help.adobe.com/en_US/lightroom/using/WS939594D8-4279-41b4-B8E9-B06BC919EC7C.html
    http://forums.adobe.com/message/4939724
    http://dpbestflow.org/color/camera-profiling

  • Removing custom camera profiles

    I am running windows 7.  How do I remove custom camera profiles created by x-rite passport?
    thanks,
    Randy

    Randy,
    Be careful deleting profiles, particularly from the OS.  I think the x-rite manager actually hides profiles instead of deleting them which is probably just fine.
    Regarding actual deletion, I am not certain so please test this - if the profiles are not being used by any images, deleting should not be a problem.  If some images are using them however and the profiles are deleted, the next time that image renders it won't be able to find the profile and will have to render using an Adobe default color profile.  To compound this problem, there is no easy way to filter by color profile (a couple of plug-ins exist I think) so it becomes difficult to know if it a particular profile is being used.
    One way around this, again I believe this is correct but please test for yourself, is that if you use the DNG format for your RAW images, when you update the DNG Preview (instead of Ctrl-S) you embed the color profile into the image and therefor you can delete them.  This can be handy when you have one-time uses for the special color profiles.
    Jeff

  • How can i create a camera profile with camera raw?

    Hi
    how can i create a camera profile with camera raw without x-rite or other third software?
    i have a Colour Checker ,with different shade of gray and different colors
    i remember about a script or something like that
    i google a lot , but without luck
    can i create my camera raw profile using a color checker with photoshop acr ?
    i'm not sure but this should be the script http://simon.tindemans.eu/tools/acrcalibrator , right?
    but i don't know how use it
    is there a tutorial ? maybe a video to create a profile with camera raw
    thanks
    greetings

    Hello, I think that you search for https://www.adobe.com/cfusion/entitlement/index.cfm?e=labs%5Fdngprofileeditor
    Here is a PDF from adobe about it: http://wwwimages.adobe.com/www.adobe.com/content/dam/Adobe/en/products/photoshop/pdfs/cs6/ DNGProfile_EditorDocumentation.pdf
    And an article: http://www.luminous-landscape.com/reviews/accessories/dng-profiles.shtml

  • ACR 5 - Support for Custom Camera Profiles

    ACR 4 allows users to select from a list of four device-independent colour spaces (Adobe RGB 1998, ColorMatch RGB, ProPhoto RGB and sRGB). Unlike other RAW processors, it does not allow selection of a custom camera profile. This capability is very useful when colour accuracy is of considerable importance (e.g. reproduction of art works). Does ACR 5 allow for selection of custom profiles?

    When this question had been asked in the past the answer has always been, "No, because these choices are all that you need." This may seem to be a rather close minded answer. But in reality the Prophoto color space encompasses everything else that is available. So the solution has been to do all of your work in ACR in Prophoto and send the image on to Photoshop in that color space. Then convert to the desired color space in Photoshop.

  • [4.3] Custom camera profiles now ignored

    Hi,
    After installation of LR 4.3, my custom camera profiles are no longer recognized. They are still in the correct folder along with the other camera profiles installed by LR but these custom profiles are not shown in the drop down list in the Camera Calibration panel.
    Any similar experience?
    Any fix?
    Thanks in advance.

    Aaaah, it seems that custom profiles now need to be stored in another folder, different from the one where the default profiles are stored.
    Previously, all profiles (default and custom) were stored there for my 5D :
    C:\ProgramData\Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles\Camera\Canon EOS 5D
    Now the custom profiles need to be moved there (create the folder if it doesn't exist) :
    C:\Users\<user>\AppData\Roaming\Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles\Canon EOS 5D
    A warning about this change would have been nice and time saving.

  • Custom Camera Profile List (Color Checker Passport)

    Hi
    I am new to Lightroom 4.3 and have a question regarding Custom Camera Profiles. I have created custom profiles using Color Checker Passport for sunny, cloudy, flash, tungsten etc but would really like to create one for most shoots. I thought it would be a good idea to name it say "Temp" and overwrite each time so that I dont end up knee deep in camera profiles. But I am guessing if I do this will the latest saved version of "Temp" change the camera profile of all other previously saved versions of "Temp" from other shoots?
    It would be good if the saved version of "Temp" resided within the folder of that particular shoot only.

    twenty_one wrote:
    In fact I'm amazed at how good the Adobe Standard profile is (Nikon D300/700) - I have never been able to improve on it for sheer accuracy.
    ColorChecker Passport profiles I created for my Canon 5D MKII, 600D and 300D bodies looks better than the Adobe Standard profile, with both set to the same neutral white balance. This includes both single-illuminant and dual-illuminant profiles.
    Take a look at the below images which were adjusted in LR using normal adjustments for a "picture" image, and not adjusted as a test chart. The Deep Blue and Purplish Blue patches have a slightly different hue and are more saturated on  my non-wide gamut display. I'm sure they would look even more different on a wide gamut display. The ColorChecker profiled image looks closer to the actual ColorChecker when compared side-by-side. Some of the other color patches also have more saturation, which again appears more accurate.
    I am certainly no "expert" on color management, but do have over 40 years of film, color darkroom, and digital imaging experience. To me the ColorChecker profile image looks better and more accurate than the Adobe Standard profile image, and that's just my opinion. Maybe it's something unique to Adobe's Canon profiles, but I have no Nikon equipment to test this assumption.
    Concerning the OP's creation and use of multiple "sunny, cloudy, flash, tungsten etc. profiles," I did the same thing when I first used the CC Passport. And you're correct that for normal sunlight pictures only one (1) profile is actually needed, with changes made to white balance for the different conditions. But there is nothing wrong with creating multiple profiles and saving them with their matching white balance settings as a Develop preset. Disk space is cheap and IMHO LR simplifies the process and organization of presets, just as Rob Cole suggested.
    I would suggest further that under some natural lighting conditions white balance alone may not totally correct the image. Examples would be high-altitude, early morning and evening low-angle sunlight, etc. Of course this begs the question of how much should you actually "correct" these images – It depends on the purpose, such as artistic versus clinical usage, or a balance of both.

  • Removing custom camera profiles on a Mac? Lr4

    I have some old colorchecker camera calibration profiles I would like to delete on a Mac. I don't know where to find them. I am using Lightroom 4

    See this link - the location for custom Camera Profiles for LR and ACR is the same:
    http://members.lightroomqueen.com/Knowledgebase/Article/View/1373/205/lightroom-5-default- locations

  • Lightroom 4.4 won't recognize custom camera profiles

    I can't get LR4 to recognize any custom profiles.  I've loaded others' tried and proven custom profiles for Fuji X-cameras, and I've used Adobe DNG Profile Editor to create my own .dcp profile with my X-E1.  All these profiles are in the correct folder: Library>Application Support>Adobe>Camera Raw>Camera Profiles.  Yet when I open LR4 and go to the Camera Calibration panel, the only profile showing on the drop down menu is Adobe Standard. I am working with only RAW files.  I have no idea why LR4 can't see these profiles.  Do they need to go in a folder inside the Camera Profiles folder?

    OMG... I'm such a nit-wit!!  I switched the setting in my camera to try something and forgot to swith it back!
    I've been digging through this for more that an hour and never bothered to check the file setting. 
    Thanks for the suggestion!

  • Why the lens profile list can't show ALL lens profiles items from "LensProfiles 1.0" folder?

    When I add a new lens profile - Samyang 14mm f2.8 - .lcp file into the "LensProfiles > 1.0" folder, I appear there are many lens profile items can't show in the Lightroom lens profiles list.
    Please tell me how can I add these items into the LR lens profiles list........... thanks!!!

    Sorry my bad, should have put.
    Your custom Camera Raw & Lens Profiles should be installed to the User folders…
    Lightroom 5 no longer uses the shared ProgramData (Windows) / Application Support (Mac) folders for Camera or Lens Profiles. Instead, it stores the built-in profiles with its program files.
    When you create camera or lens profiles, they must be stored in the user locations listed below. If you previously stored custom profiles in other locations, you’ll need to move them to these user folders, otherwise Lightroom won’t be able to find them.
    Windows—C: \ Users \ [your username] \ AppData \ Roaming \ Adobe \ CameraRaw \ CameraProfiles \
    Mac—Macintosh HD / Users / [your username] / Library / Application Support / Adobe / CameraRaw / CameraProfiles /
    For the lens profiles, substitute the LensProfiles folder for the CameraProfiles folder.
    The camera and lens profile file extensions are:
    .dcpr—camera profile recipe file used for creating/editing a profile in the DNG Profile Editor
    .dcp—camera profile
    .lcp—lens profile

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