These are a collection of settings for both X-Transformer and Lightroom to help you get the better of the various options.
![iridient x-transformer manual iridient x-transformer manual](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/53c631e4e4b0c4d68989cbef/1507892860205-0X1GEV81D6BZ475AHZ1F/Screenshot+2017-10-13+11.32.02.jpg)
In the next chapter I offer a series of recipes.
IRIDIENT X TRANSFORMER MANUAL HOW TO
I try to offer a plain english description of the various functions so that you will be better able to decide yourself on how to use the software. In the first main chapter, I go through the application and explain the various settings and what they each do. Ironically, the difference will be more pronounced with sharper lenses as these tend to show more artifacting in Lightroom using the standard conversion. However the extent of the differences depend greatly on the type of shot, the lens used and how sharp the actual shot is to begin wth. They also have more natural gradations, and don’t show false detail on images of things like concrete or stone or other problematic textures. Images don’t have the edge artifacts or the detail smearing present in direct Lightroom conversions. It’s not going to be a magic wand that fixes all the image problems that they a photo might otherwise have.Ĭompared to a standard raw conversion in Lightroom, the differences may be subtle at first, but in my opinion these differences add up. It can’t make images sharper that are soft to begin with or fix out of focus images. It won’t magically transform your images to make them super sharp or have them jump off the screen with clarity. When using X-Transformer it’s important to understand what it can and can’t do and to temper you’re expectations accordingly.