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kg415

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Everything posted by kg415

  1. Are you using Lightroom? Are you referring to "Open as Layers in Photoshop"? If so, it's unlikely that Affinity will be able to implement that functionality, which is why I'm (regrettably) subscribing to Adobe CC.
  2. According to https://helpx.adobe.com/lightroom/faq.html: I've read elsewhere that this means that images can still be exported, and even minimally edited by using Quick Develop in the Library Module. So have you tried exporting JPEG/TIFF from your expired LR and opening these in AP? If this works, you'd not need Bridge CC. As for any non-Adobe software reading and applying LR/ACR edits, this is unlikely to happen since, as discussed earlier in this thread, this would require use of Adobe's licensed intellectual property.
  3. Here is a quote from this interesting thread: https://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/86224/is-there-any-way-of-achieving-cross-application-non-destructive-raw-editing-ma Some of these adjustments are simple, e.g. crop and exposure adjustments, others are very complicated, e.g. ACR noise reduction and adjustment brush strokes. Reverse-engineering these doesn't seem straightforward, and doing so might infringe patents, yes?
  4. I've not been able to find anything on the Adobe forums or elsewhere. It looks like ACDSee Ultimate 2018 can import ratings, labels, collections, and keywords from a Lightroom catalog, but not image edits.
  5. By "read", I mean reading and *(non-destructively) applying* any edits made to the image in Lightroom's Develop module -- that's what I'd need in any true Lightroom/Photoshop replacement. That's what allows LR to launch PS to edit a RAW file, for example.
  6. Is it realistic to expect AP, or any non-Adobe application for that matter, to read Lightroom xmp files? Wouldn't this require AP to duplicate what Adobe Camera Raw (ACR) does? That would mean either licensing or reverse-engineering ACR. Adobe doesn't license ACR separately, as far as I know, and reverse-engineering ACR might violate patents.
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