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The company claims that “thanks to the high-quality RAW conversion technology included in DxO PhotoLab 2 and DxO’s scientific calibration process, the photos taken with these devices will be automatically corrected for any optical flaws, such as distortion, vignetting, chromatic aberrations, and a lack of sharpness.”
Zeiss Milvus 25mm F1.4 ZF.2 for Nikon F. Tamron SP 45mm F1.8 Di USD (F013) for Sony Alpha. Tamron SP 35mm F1.8 Di USD (F012) for Sony Alpha.
Sigma 105mm F1.4 DG HSM Art for Nikon F. Panasonic Leica DG Vario 50-200mm F2.8-4.0 ASPH. Version 2.2 of DxO PhotoLab completes its offer for Canon, Nikon, Panasonic, Pentax and Sony with the following modules: Further, the new version supports the Mavic 2 Zoom, a DJI consumer drone with 24-48mm F2.8-3.8 lenses. The software also includes modules from the Hasselblad X1D’s range of autofocus lenses specifically designed for high resolution: the Hasselblad XCD 21mm F4, the Hasselblad XCD 30mm F3.5, and the Hasselblad XCD 90mm F3.2. In fact, DxO PhotoLab 2.2 adds no fewer than 3,472 new optical modules to its library, bringing the total number of available combinations to 46,248 - among them the recent NIKKOR Z 35mm f/1.8 S and NIKKOR Z 50mm f/1.8 S, as well as the CANON RF 24-105mm F4L and the CANON RF 50mm F1.2. The compatibility of the software does not stop there, and DxO engineers are currently calibrating, according to the company, the EOS M50, the Fujifilm GFX 50s and GFX 50r.ĭxO claims that the sofware has more than 46,000 camera/lens combinations available. By extension, the software also supports the NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/4 S and the NIKKOR F FX lens, which have already been calibrated. More than 46,000 camera/lens combinationsįor the Z 7, DxO PhotoLab 2’s camera/lens combination database includes no less than 200 optical modules.
This continues a trend already seen on update 2.1, when DxO introduced support capabilities for three new devices: the highly anticipated Nikon Z 7, Nikon’s first full-format hybrid, as DxO refers to it, the Mavic 2 Pro drone from DJI, the Mavic 2 Pro, a consumer drone from DJI featuring a Hasselblad L1D-20c camera with a 1-inch sensor, and the Fujifilm X-A5, a hybrid camera with a built-in Bayer-filtered CMOS APS-C sensor. The software now adds support capabilities for four new devices: the Nikon Z 6, the Canon EOS R and EOS M50, and the DJI Mavic 2 Zoom drone. This new version offers improved performance and additional camera support. One more contender for the title of “your photo editor with everything included” DxO PhotoLab now reaches version 2.2, and the company behind the product has some new features to share with potential buyers. Support for the Nikon Z6 and the DJI Mavic 2 Zoom drone are some of the new features of DxO PhotoLab 2.2, DxO’s software, on the path to become a complete image-production workflow.