![]() 4000X3000) and "As Shot" will crop to the setting in the camera. In the Crop and Straighten tool there are defaults and two options that appear to mean the same thing The Default is "As Shot" and the other option that you want to use is "Original" Original will give you all of the pixels recorded for the image (i.e. This means that even though the full set of sensor pixels is being recorded, the in camera aspect ratio is being honored on JPEGs out of the camera and JPEG thumbnails. IIRC, the Lumix is one of those that will let you set the aspect ratio in the camera. I'd like to bump LR to the top of my list, if I can find a way to deal with this issue. Thanks in advance for any support you can provide. I tried searching the LR forums dot net, but I couldn't find anything that discussed this issue. What was most troubling is a very short reply from an Adobe tech to one of the Adobe forum topics: "This is as designed." No other explanation and the tech didn't participate any further in that thread (sorry, I can't find the thread now to save my life). Maybe I can customize the camera profile, or make manual settings (although I doubt that will work because the image is cropped before I even edit preferences or select any tools to edit and no tool can bring the missing portion back). I like LR otherwise and it is in my top-two choices. My hope is one or some of you can help me with this. My camera doesn't appear in the drop-down list, but LR claims to support it - Panasonic Lumix FZ200. ![]() Does that mean the RAW file was automatically cropped AND stretched?įrom my research, incomplete as it is, the problem seems to be in the camera profile. The weird thing is the output is still a 4000x3000 image, even though the largest resolution in the camera is 4000x3000. But if I had used that file instead, the LR automatic cropping might not have been a big deal because the image had room for it. Unfortunately, I deleted another RAW file after my initial selection of photos from the JPG output (I do RAW+JPG in-camera) because it wasn't quite the right composition for me. Lightroom 5 has automatically cropped an image and I can't find a way to recover the lost pixels in LR or after I export it as a TIFF to. I've read other users of even older versions of LR that have the same problem. I realize I am not much of a judge of quality developing programs and don't have any experience using the tools, but this is a problem I didn't cause. Any thoughts would be appreciated.My first post here, my first time using RAW and my first time using LR (the free trial). If, however, I wire it up so that I can measure that voltage while it is attached to the camera, it drops down to 2V, which I'm guessing is not sufficient to fire the flash. It does this even if the camera is off.Īt first, I thought the camera's hot shoe must be broken so that it was constantly in the "closed" position (thus completing the circuit for the flash), but my multi-meter says there there is not a complete circuit between the hotshoe components, and I have 4 other flashes of various brands (including another Andoer) that work just fine.Įven stranger, the flash circuit runs on 4.8V (i.e., if I take the flash off the camera, turn it on, then measure the voltage between the + and - terminal on its hot shoe connection, it reads 4.8V). If I pull it off and put it back on, it will again fire when it first makes contact, then not again. This flash has worked in the past, but now, if the flash is on, it automatically fires once when I first attach it to the cameras hot shoe, then it will not trigger again. I'm using an Andoer speedlight on my a6500. I've got some weird flash behavior that I don't understand.
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