![]() You can of course get many of the same effects with these programs but you need to know where you are going and how to get there, and of course the range of filters in Dfx is impressively large. With the Dfx interface you can hop between filters and layers just for fun until you come across one or a combination that takes your fancy or delivers the specific result you want. It’s quite a different paradigm to the main photo editing and asset management programs out there (Aperture, Lightroom, Capture OnePro, etc), which typically present you with a range of tools with sliders. This is a great way to see the range of choices available to you and to pre-visualize what adding a particular effect or preset will do. ![]() For each of the layers you can reduce the opacity of the filter and select the blending mode. The basic philosophy behind Dfx is to enable you to quickly select from a large range of filters: select a filter from the Filters strip in the pane below the main viewer window, choose from a range of presets in the right Presets pane, tweak using the Parameters tab in the same pane then add a new layer in the left Effect pane repeat and rinse to your heart’s content. ![]() In this image, I’ve added a temperature filter dialed back to 88.9% opacity to warm up the picture as well as a medium-strength polarizer filter. Organization and Philosophyĭfx is organized into 4 main window panes: Viewer, Filters, Presets/Parameters and Effect with multiple layers as can be seen in the screenshot below.įor those of you interested the picture shown here is of Château de Chantilly, which is about 40km north of Paris, France. I installed the Photo Plug-in, which also gave me access to the standalone program though I didn’t use this except to input the validation code. Improved interface including a new optimized preview size so images can now be previewed in 4096, 20 pixelsĭownloading and installing the trial version was a breeze though I did find the large number of product variants on the products page a bit confusing at first. ![]()
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