DNG Comptability

Adobe markets DNG as the most reliably readable format over time. They market this format as one that will remain consistent over the long run. They say that you can't trust a Nikon NEF file to be readable over time as software programs change so you should convert all your raw files to DNG. So, what does Adobe do? They discontinue support for their DNG to convert new Nikon/NEF files, i.e. Nikon D7000, to DNG format without upgrading to CS5. Thanks Adobe. After converting hundreds, if not thousands, of my NEFs to DNG for better future compatibility, I find the NEFs on my newest camera are not compatible without buying a new version of CS. I'm not feeling the trust here Adobe. You can keep your CS5 thank you very much.

If you download and use the latest version of the DNG converter, and choose the appropriate options, it will create DNG files that you will be able to open in your current version of Photoshop/ACR.  That is the main advantage (in my opinion) of the DNG converter.  If your camera is so new that your version of ACR cannot read your NEF files, the DNG converter provides a solution.

Similar Messages

  • Adobe dng and Photoshop Elements Workflow Question

    My camera isn't supported by the Camera Raw  for the PSE version that I have so I must convert the original raws into dngs using the DNG Converter. 
    Since the converterr doesn't operate on a file but only on a folder basis, I find that a workflow involves converting all the raws in a folder first and that nearly doubles the storage required.  But in any one folder I might have only a few raws that I am actually interested in.  But I don't see that there is any way to be working in PSE come across a file (using the jpeg image) that I want to work with and then convert just that image.  This would be a better workflow and save a lot of space.
    The alternative seems to involve running though all the folders, noting the image numbers and then moving all those raws to a new folder and convert it before I can sit down to serious work. 
    Any suggestions on how to have a smoother process?
    Thanks.

    You're making it much more complicated than it has to be. If you make a shortcut for  the DNG converter on your windows desktop or for a mac, a desktop alias or put the converter in the Dock, you can just drop a single file on it. The converter will open and you can ignore the stuff in the window except for the destination for the converted file, and click Convert.

  • Is it wise to keep the Nikon camera files "DSC's"  after downloading them and converting to DNG files via Adobe converter for lightroom use. In other words do the DNG files have all the raw data I would ever need in processing or should I save the camera'

    Is it wise to keep the Nikon camera files "DSC's"  after downloading them and converting to DNG files via Adobe converter for lightroom use. In other words do the DNG files have all the raw data I would ever need in processing or should I save the camera's DSC files?

    DNG files do not contain some metadata supplied by the camera, which can be used by the manufacturer's software. Thus, if you don't keep the original Raw photo, you will lose this information.
    If your 1000% sure you're never going to use the manufacturer's software, then this isn't a problem. But who can be sure what software you will be using 10 years from now?

  • Can't open .CR2 files in PhotoShop CS5, Camera RAW or Adobe DNG Converter

    Firstly take note I shot these with a Canon EOS 450D (or Rebel XSi)...
    I see a lot of answers speaking about having the most up to date version of the Camera RAW Plug-in.
    I have a similar issue with my .CR2 files... I cannot open them in Camera RAW because it tells me that my camera model or make is not supported by the Plug-in, and so I was directed by other forums to just try converting the .CR2 files to .DNG. I already had the Adobe DNG Converter (version 6.5 I believe), so I tried this. It too told me that my files or camera make were not supported.
    However, I have always been able to successfully both open my .CR2 files AND convert them to .DNG. I had not updated anything on my camera nor on my Adobe programs and for some reason this last attempt to open RAW files failed me... I have no idea what change would have led to it. Luckily I shot in both RAW and Large JPG but I certainly don't want to rely on my JPGs of course... Any idea why this problem might have arisen now if it had always worked easily in the past?
    Thanks!

    Are these the same exact files you've opened before that you cannot now open?
    Or are they newly copied files (camera or CF card to computer)?
    Can you not open ANY Canon 450D files, even those you find online and download?
    What I'm getting at with these questions is to try to eliminate or suspect data corruption of the files on your disk.
    Exactly what versions of the various tools do you have, specifically (don't guess - go check)?
    -Noel

  • Unable to see DNG files in Photoshop CS2

    Hi:
    I am using Photoshop CS2 in Windows XP Pro and have *.CR2 pictures taken with Canon EOS 40D.
    I downloaded Camera_Raw_3.7.zip and extracted Camera Raw.8bi to C:\Program Files\Common Files\Adobe\Plug-Ins\CS2\File Formats
    I downloaded Adobe DNG Converter ver. 4.3.1 and converted the Canon CR2 files to DNG files.
    I can see the pictures in Adobe Bridge CS2 1.0.4.6 fine.
    However, when I open Adobe Photoshop CS2 and try File/open, the drop down does not show any selection for DNG files. If I try to physically drag a file into Photoshop, I get the message that the extension is not supported.
    Upon opening Help/About Plug-In, I do not see Camera raw anywhere in the long list.
    What do I need to do to bring DNG files into Photoshop?
    Thanks.

    If you don't see Camera Raw in the list it usually means that it is not in the correct folder or the it might be damaged.
    It looks like you listed the correct folder at C:\Program Files\Common Files\Adobe\Plug-Ins\CS2\File Formats
    When you navigate to that folder do you see Camera Raw.8bi listed? It might only say Camera Raw, depending on how you have Windows set up.
    Did you restart Photoshop after putting the filter into the File Formats folder?

  • Can't open dng file in Photoshop cs5 from Lightroom 5.6

    Hello, I've searched around and can't find the answer to my question.
    Technical details:
    OS X v10.8.5
    Photoshop CS5 (ver12.1) Camera Raw ver 6.7.1.340
    Lightroom ver 5.6 (Camera Raw ver8.6)
    Camera: Nikon D600
    Minimum camera raw version to support D600 Raw is ver 7.3  and Lightroom ver 4.3
    I know that my version of PS doesn't support my Nikon D600 raw files so I've used the Adobe DNG converter and converted a raw file so I can process in PS. I can open the DNG file directly in PS and get the ACR screen to perform my edits. However, what I really want to do is open the DNG file in PS from LR.
    While in LR, if I select Edit in -> Adobe Photoshop CS5, I get the notification from LR that "This version of Lightroom may require the Photoshop Camera raw plug-in version 8.6 for full compatibility". I would have expected that regardless of whether I opened the (same) dng file from PS or LR (and edit in PS), that once in PS. the ACR screen in PS would be presented. Can anyone explain to me why this is the case and if this is normal or expected behaviour? Thanks
    Also:
    Adobe DNG converter preferences = Use Camera Raw 6.6 and later
    Lightroom preferences = File Handling -> Use Camera Raw 6.6 and later
    Thank you in advance,
    Mark

    As Station_two mentioned, you're using a version of LR that is not compatible with the older version of PS CS5. I don't know it LR has the ability to save DNGs to work in older versions of PS. If not, you will need a DNG converter to save them to the version of Camera Raw that PS CS5 can handle or upgrade PS.

  • "Edit In" Photoshop CC not working for RAW or DNG files after applying LR 5.3 and Camera Raw 8.3

    I just applied the Lightroom 5.3 and Camera Raw 8.3 updates and now am no longer able to open RAW or DNG files into Photoshop CC. When I select a file and choose "Edit In" Photoshop, photoshop will launch, then nothing will happen. After 2 to 5 minutes, an error will popup in Lightroom saying "The file could not be edited because Adobe Photoshop CC could not be launched." An error I've never seen before. When I click "Ok", Lightroom will show that it's "preparing a file for editing" in the upper left, it will create and save a psd to disk and in the catalog (another new behavior), then it will open in photoshop. All other file types (jpgs, tiff, psd) seem to work/open fine between applications. No difference if I open photoshop prior to selecting "Edit In". Selecting "Edit In" other applications, like Viveza, work fine.
    I tried first deleting preference files in both applications. No luck. Ditto for plugins. Notta. Eventually I completely uninstalled and fresh installed Photoshop, Lightroom, and Bridge from the cloud. Same deal...can't open raw/dng files into Photoshop.
    I'm at a complete loss, dead in the water, with a mountain of editing work piling on top of me. Kicking myself for applying the upgrades, which I had been delaying for some time to avoid just such a cluster%#$. Ugh.
    I'm on a PC running Windows 7 64bit.
    Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

    In the normal situation, LR needs to see a PS installed for it to detect the Edit In PS option is possible, so if you uninstall both, then install PS, first, then LR.  Of course with this release there may be some hiccup that requires installing either one or the other, again, but if you've uninstalled both and are reinstalling both, then install PS, first.

  • Adobe Bridge CS4 - "convert to DNG" not working?

    Hi
    I am downloading a bunch of raw .CR2 files taken with a Canon 5D mark iii, and trying to convert them to DNG using Bridge, so that I can open them up in Camera Raw (which won't read the original CR2 files as you need CS5.5 or later). I have selected the "convert to DNG" option but the conversion doesn't seem to work, it's just copying the CR2 files over, Any idea why?
    thanks

    I have selected the "convert to DNG" option but the conversion doesn't seem to work, it's just copying the CR2 files over, Any idea why?
    It seems you are using Photodownloader that comes with the CS version you are using currently. This Photodownloader is linked to the Raw converter of the version it is part of. So if it does not show the CR2 files as images it also won't convert to DNG
    For this you need to download the latest and Free Adobe DNG converter.
    Check this page, there is also an option to download the converter for either Mac or Windows

  • After importing a Light Room catalog, the files I export, export smaller than the originals - with every option of file ending.  I want to export them as DNGs but the files are reduced from around 5000 pixels to about 1700 pixels in length.

    Hi All ~ Thanks in advance for your help! 
    I have been on a support chat with Adobe for 2 hours now and they can't figure this out but hopefully one of you can! 
    I exported my files as a LightRoom Catalog
    I zipped the catalog and the smart previews together
    I sent the zipped folder via Dropbox to a photo editor
    Editor edited the photos
    Editor exported the files as a Lightroom Catalog and zipped them
    Editor sent the LR Catalog back to me via Dropbox
    I opened the Lightroom Catalog in LR (the pixel dimensions are the same as the originals)
    I exported the photos as DNG's (which does not allow for any file size changes - I also tried JPGs and the same thing happened)
         Camera Raw 7.1 and later (I tried them all just to see - and they all rendered the same result)
         Embed Fast Load Data (checked on)
         Embed Original Raw File (check on)
    I checked the Pixel dimensions on my exported photos and they are smaller
    The original pixel dimensions are:
    4912x7360 and the new size (after exporting) is: 1709x2560
    But here's the real kicker!  WHEN I UPLOAD A PHOTO TO LIGHTROOM FROM MY COMPUTER DIRECTLY (not from a LR catalog), AND EXPORT THAT FILE, IT EXPORTS AT FULL SIZE with no change in the pixels dimensions!

    Hi All ~ Thanks in advance for your help! 
    I have been on a support chat with Adobe for 2 hours now and they can't figure this out but hopefully one of you can! 
    I exported my files as a LightRoom Catalog
    I zipped the catalog and the smart previews together
    I sent the zipped folder via Dropbox to a photo editor
    Editor edited the photos
    Editor exported the files as a Lightroom Catalog and zipped them
    Editor sent the LR Catalog back to me via Dropbox
    I opened the Lightroom Catalog in LR (the pixel dimensions are the same as the originals)
    I exported the photos as DNG's (which does not allow for any file size changes - I also tried JPGs and the same thing happened)
         Camera Raw 7.1 and later (I tried them all just to see - and they all rendered the same result)
         Embed Fast Load Data (checked on)
         Embed Original Raw File (check on)
    I checked the Pixel dimensions on my exported photos and they are smaller
    The original pixel dimensions are:
    4912x7360 and the new size (after exporting) is: 1709x2560
    But here's the real kicker!  WHEN I UPLOAD A PHOTO TO LIGHTROOM FROM MY COMPUTER DIRECTLY (not from a LR catalog), AND EXPORT THAT FILE, IT EXPORTS AT FULL SIZE with no change in the pixels dimensions!

  • Importing, copyping raw files as DNG files - copy to location choice, and more ???

    First:
    When I copy raw files as DNG files, the right hand pane shows where the copies will be placed.  (I use Windows 7) I do not have much of a choice, and cannot set a default.  The default choice is "My Pictures" on the C: drive.  I have an Solid State Drive, SSD, and do NOT store my photos on that small, 256Gb drive.  I store my images on an internal hard drive. 
    All i want to do is set the default "Copy To" location to where I store my images.  I would like to copy them to the original folder, in a separate folder (for example, LR DNG).  Instead, I have to open the SSD, find the files, and copy them to my preferred location.  This is very irritating.
    Second:
    Worst, it appears that the Copy function puts the copied images into multiple folders.  I had 11 images from raw files that were put into three separate folders.  That seems quite silly to me.  It causes me to do more work opening the folders and copying them to the root folder.  That is very irritating.   What is going on here?
    can these two issues be resolved? Thanks, in advance.

    My apologies.  I thought it would open the selected folder and reveal the images to be converted.  That would be the most obvious thing to do, but it does not behave that way.  I made a couple folders with test images, CR2 and RW2, and the converter converted them. 
    Again, the navigation was funky, inconvenient, but it works.  i complain because we pay a lot of money to use Adobe products, they have huge resources, and  they seem to release products that have obvious flaws, especially navigation.  Maybe they just hate Microsoft.  Sorry for the rant.
    Thanks for getting me to use DNG converter. 

  • I can't save my picture to .jpeg in CameraRaw, the only format available is .dng. Why??

    I want to save my pictures to .jpeg in CameraRaw, but the only format available is .dng. I have to open the picture in Elements 12 just to save as .jpeg. Why??

    Because the ACR module is meant to convert the raw data into an image format that the editor can read. From the editor (or the organizer) you can save your raw files to image files formats like jpeg, tiff or psd. Simply click the 'Open in editor' button.
    For batch conversion to jpeg, either use the 'process multiple files' option in the file menu of the editor, or select several raws in the organizer and export to a new location in the desired format.
    The option to 'save' as DNG may be used if you want to convert to the raw DNG format. You don't need to use that feature.
    I highly recommend you take the time to read the help file (Help button in the camera raw dialog).

  • Plans to enable import of Cinema DNG (RAW) files from the Blackmagic POCKET Cinema Camera

    Are there plans to enable import of Cinema DNG (RAW) files from the Black Magic POCKET Cinema Camera into Adobe Premiere Pro CS6?

    There won't be any new features introduced in CS6, only some bug fixes if ever. All new features go into CC. Rumour has it that Camera RAW will be added into PrPro (sooner or later).
    Off topic question: have you tried to convert BMPCC CinemaDNG files into DNG via Adobe DNG Converter? Resulting files are about 15% larger, so I hope that is what constitutes uncompressing them and making possible to import into PrPro CC natively (I'm not on CC, hence can't test, but I'm curious).

  • When I import files (copy from jpeg or copy as DNG from raw, where is the full size original stored?

    I have the photos go here file, does LR5 put the untouched original there? Do I need my own file for originals and if so, how does LR5 know where to find the full size original? I have everything working but don't understand where my untouched originals go after import. Say I import off my card to My Pictures/Lightroom Catalog/ Photos go here ..... are my originals there? What if I erase my card now, do I only have partial size negatives basically? I don't understand why LR5 didnt put in an originals do here file that imports the full photo to a stock folder. I am so confused I am about ready to throw out LR5. I even bought your instructional DVD and it doesnt make where the original files location clear, it just repeats that LT5 does NOT import the original, just thumbnail and instructions, where is the program getting the photo when I double click to open it , or am I only seeing a lower resolution version of the photo and the full res is now gone because I formatted the card?

    When you import photos, you can choose "Copy" or "Move" or "Copy as DNG", and then select a destination folder on your hard disk. This happens on the right hand side of the Import dialog box. So your original files go to this destination folder.
    Alternatively, if your photos are already on your hard disk, you can import by choosing "Add" and the original photos remain in the existing location.
    If you're not sure where the photos are, open Lightroom, go to the Library Module, and on the right hand side is the Metadata Panel. Set the dropdown to "Default", and it will show you where your photos are stored. Alternatively, you can right-click on any photo and select "Show In Finder"/"Show in Explorer" and Lightroom will take you to the exact folder where the photo is located.
    So, bottom line, you are in total control of where the originals go, and if your forgot where you put them, or made a mistake, you can always find out where they are.
    What if I erase my card now, do I only have partial size negatives basically?
    If your import was successful, then the photos are now stored on your hard disk. So you have the full size original for Lightroom to work with.
    it just repeats that LT5 does NOT import the original, just thumbnail and instructions
    Lightroom does import the original, which means, in Lightroom jargon, that it records the location and metadata about the photo; in other words, Lightroom knows where the photo is, but Lightroom NEVER contains your photo, your photo is ALWAYS stored on the hard disk.
    Because Lightroom now knows where your photo is located, it is important that you not manage your photos (move, edit, rename, delete) outside of Lightroom. Photo managements tasks now must be done in Lightroom. (There are advanced methods that let you manage your photos outside of Lightroom, but these would be NOT RECOMMENDED for beginners)

  • XSI RAW to Aperture via DNG not working

    I just got the Digital Rebel XSI and have been using Aperture for my JPEGs on my P&S camera and was hoping to finally shoot in RAW. From what I understand XSI's RAW is not supported in Aperture so I tried to batch convert RAW to DNG using Adobe Digital Negative Converter. However, Aperture did not accept these DNG files and said the file format was unsupported any thoughts on how I can get XSI's RAW into Aperture?

    First off thanks for all your help. If you haven't figured I'm an amateur newbie who's trying to take the next step to being an advanced amateur with getting the XSI. I've been using Aperture for my jpegs on my P&S camera since I prefer it's organizational tools to those in iPhoto.
    So now my "workflow" (I always think of that as a professional word and feel funny using it as an amateur) right now is to shoot in RAW and convert to DNG for including in Aperture and save the RAW files. If I later want to import the RAW files can I "overwrite" the DNGs with the corresponding RAW files and preserve whatever editing/touchups I did on the DNGs? Or will I have to reedit the RAW files again later?

  • Is there a "one-touch" way to convert to my existing library to DNG?

    Is there a "one-touch" way to convert to DNG?
    My Aperture library currently has three types of files: JPEG files taken with point-and-shoot camera going back for years, (ii) RAW (NEF) files made with a Nikon D60, (iii) RAW (CR2) files made with a Canon G9, and (iv) RAW (DNG) files I have shot recently.
    I am interested in converting all the non-DNG RAW files (NEFs and CR2s) into the Adobe DNG file format. I understand that the format has a smaller file size (than the original RAW file) and that it is "lossless" (unlike converting to JPEG). So, in addition to "standardizing" my file-types, it will also reduce my overall library size (in GBs).
    So, the question is: is there a way to take my existing Aperture library and, through some (hopefully free) combination of scripts and programs, convert all the RAW files to DNG automatically and without having to export each one from Aperture and them import it again. That is, I want a solution that will look at each file and ignore the JPEGs and DNGs, (ii) convert the NEFs and CR2s into DNG, and (iii) move the original NEF/CR2 files to a folder (just in case)?
    This is not an problem going forward, because I can easily just import as DNG to begin with ... but its an issue for a few thousand images in my library.
    Any ideas? Also, anyone think this is a crazy bad idea?
    Thanks,
    ~B

    Do you find that using Aperture to "import" the pictures (e.g., using the import function on Aperture and pointing it at your memory card) gives better results than using the DNG converter to "import" (e.g., by selecting the camera memory card and saving the conversions to disk, then importing those DNG files into Aperture)?
    Not the way it works. The camera memory card does not have conversions on it, it has RAW (or JPEG) image files.
    IMO generally most useful to help keep drives underfilled and fast (drives slow as they fill) is to manage by Reference ("referenced images") as in the workflow outline below where Master images can live anywhere. However with small changes similar workflow could be applied to Managed Masters.
    I feel pretty strongly that card-to-Aperture or even camera-to-Aperture handling of original images puts originals at unnecessary risk. I suggest this workflow, first using the Finder (not Aperture) to copy images from CF card to computer hard drive:
    • Remove the CF card from the camera and insert it into a CF card reader. Faster readers and faster cards are preferable, and Firewire is much preferable to USB2.
    • Finder-copy images from CF to a labeled folder on the intended permanent Masters location hard drive.
    • Eject CF.
    • Burn backup hard drive or DVD copies of the original images (optional recommended backup step).
    • Eject backup hard drive(s) or DVDs.
    • From within Aperture, import images from the hard drive folder into Aperture selecting "Store files in their current location." This is called "referenced images." During import is the best time to also add keywords, but that is another discussion.
    • Review pix for completeness (e.g. a 500-pic shoot has 500 valid images showing).
    • Reformat CF in camera, and archive originals off site on hard drives and/or on DVDs.
    Note that the "eject" steps above are important in order to avoid mistakenly working on removable media.
    Alternatively, does anyone actually use (or recommend) Nikon-branded software for any step in this process? If your camera shoots JPG (as all mine did till a few months ago), it does not matter ... but does the RAW thing change that equasion?
    Yes RAW changes the equation. Folks who want the very best NEF conversions will use Nikon Capture NX2 but the interface *****. Personally I find Aperture very good for the D2x.
    Good luck!
    -Allen Wicks

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