![]() Data Max (or specular) – «white» will be set to the actual maximum found in raw data of the CR2 file or to Specular White, if Specular White is higher.Specular White – «white» will be set to the SPecular White value found in makernotes of CR2 file.Normal White –«white» will be set to the Normal White value found in makernotes of CR2 file.Preferences - Output DNG Settings - Data Maximum: controls the content of the DNG White Level tag:.This may be useful (and even necessary) while merging first and second frame in certain HDR stacking applications that analyze frames for exposure parameters. Adjust EXIF shutter speed by -1EV for second frame (for HDR merge) – simulates reduction of exposure by 1 stop by setting the shutter speed in EXIF 1 stop higher.Automated font size selection on 1st run.Better handling of file names provided in non-default character set.EXIF/Makernotes data records are not stored into output DNGs (metadata format is very different in CR3 files, so not directly mappable into DNG files).tested only on very limited samples set.Bug fixed: filename generation from EXIF date may generate empty or wrong filename item.(experimental) EXIF support for CR3 files.macOS: Universal binary (Intel/Apple Silicon). ![]() ![]() Problem fixed: Make/Model tags was not recorded for DNGs made from CR3 input files.In essence, in Dual Pixel Raw mode, the camera records into one file some equivalent of two shots, bracketed by (approximately) 1 EV. However, there is one more possible use for a dual-pixel raw, which is not covered by the manufacturer: the second frame, the one that is made out of one set of subpixels, collects half of the light that the composite frame does, as if it was exposed one stop lower compared to the composite frame. The intended use of this arrangement is to enable some extra editing after the shot: because of the parallax between the subpixels, Canon Digital Photo Professional software allows one to perform microadjustment of focus, bokeh shift, and ghosting reduction. If Dual Pixel RAW mode is enabled in the camera, the resulting CR2 / CR3 files contain two images, or two frames: one composite, made from reading both subpixels, summed and the other is made out of one set of subpixels. Some Canon's sensors have a somewhat unusual pixel arrangement: each pixel is composed of two subpixels.
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