N.View, N.Capture, P.Shop.Elements, PS7....When?Why?What order?....

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I would be very grateful if someone could take the time to tell me,

in point form and monosyllables,

because I'm not the sharpest knife in the drawer,

the methods by which these programs INTERRELATE.

That is......basically what makes them uniquely worthwhile,

and in what simple order would one use them

Again, many thanks

p.b.
 
I use Nikon View to browse my images and rotate my NEFs. If I wasn't using NEFs, Windows XP would fine for browsing the images. There are other programs that can rotate jpegs.

I use Nikon Capture to do initial editing and converting of my NEFs. If I was only using jpegs, I'd bypass this program.

Photoshop Elements is a small version of Photoshop. I don't use it.

Photoshop 7 is my prefered editing and adjustment program. After I've converted my NEFs to TIFF, I edit them here and save them as photoshop files. When I want to display them on the Web, I convert them to jpeg here.

I use them in the order listed.

--
Tony

http://homepage.mac.com/a5m http://www.pbase.com/a5m
 
I use Nikon View to browse my images and rotate my NEFs. If I
wasn't using NEFs, Windows XP would fine for browsing the images.
There are other programs that can rotate jpegs.

I use Nikon Capture to do initial editing and converting of my
NEFs. If I was only using jpegs, I'd bypass this program.

Photoshop Elements is a small version of Photoshop. I don't use it.

Photoshop 7 is my prefered editing and adjustment program. After
I've converted my NEFs to TIFF, I edit them here and save them as
photoshop files. When I want to display them on the Web, I convert
them to jpeg here.

I use them in the order listed.
Thanks Tony - What do you mean by "initial editing"? - and how does it differ from "editing and adjusting"?
Why not go straight to PS7
What is the advantage of converting NEFs to TIFF?
 
im in nikon view 5 go to open a raw image by clicking file edit other programs in nikon capture editor, then message comes up UNSUPPORTED DRIVER CALL, CHECK DRIVER VERSION
what do i do ???
I use Nikon View to browse my images and rotate my NEFs. If I
wasn't using NEFs, Windows XP would fine for browsing the images.
There are other programs that can rotate jpegs.

I use Nikon Capture to do initial editing and converting of my
NEFs. If I was only using jpegs, I'd bypass this program.

Photoshop Elements is a small version of Photoshop. I don't use it.

Photoshop 7 is my prefered editing and adjustment program. After
I've converted my NEFs to TIFF, I edit them here and save them as
photoshop files. When I want to display them on the Web, I convert
them to jpeg here.

I use them in the order listed.
Thanks Tony - What do you mean by "initial editing"? - and how does
it differ from "editing and adjusting"?
Why not go straight to PS7
What is the advantage of converting NEFs to TIFF?
--
nikon d-100
nikon 24-85 G
sigma 15-30 EX
SB-80dx
currently borrowing a sigma 70-200 2.8
work in camera store...borrow lots of other stuff..
 
Ok, having owned all of these here we go...

Nikon View

I use this for scrolling through both NEF, JPG and TIF files as Windows doesn't support NEF. I also use it to transfer images from the camera because the Windows tool will not transfer all the shooting data like ISO speeds.

Nikon Capture

I will use this to prep NEF files and correct things like White Balance issues and Under-exposure. Also, Vignette control is a very nice feature and if you have no other Noise reduction software the improved NR in NC 3.5 really isn't all that bad (I personally use Dfine).

Photoshop Elements 2.0

I bought this when I really couldn't afford the full Photoshop 7 yet and I have to tell you I would sooner use GIMP (free PS 4.x Equivalent package) then this package again... It lacks many simple things that you don't often think about until they're gone; You have no Curves, No Channel Mixer, The healing Brush and Patch tools... Furthermore, Adobe Castrated the algorithms that are present and when making the same changes in both PS7 and PS Elements 2 you get different results with the full PS 7 yielding much better quality images. At least with Gimp, you get most of the tools with decent quality and you don't have to worry about what the app is going to do to your image.

Photoshop 7.0

I finally cracked and bought this as I only had it at work before and I left that job. I use this for Curves, USM, Healing Brush, Dfine (NR) and NIK Sharpener Pro (both plug-ins), Channel Mixer, Layer and Channel masks and Color Management as well as resizing Photos for the web.
I would be very grateful if someone could take the time to tell me,

in point form and monosyllables,

because I'm not the sharpest knife in the drawer,

the methods by which these programs INTERRELATE.

That is......basically what makes them uniquely worthwhile,

and in what simple order would one use them

Again, many thanks

p.b.
--

'He who works his land will have abundant food, but he who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty.' -- King Solomon
 
You uninstall Nikon View 5 and upgrade to Nikon View 6 and then reinstall Nikon Capture 3.51!
I use Nikon View to browse my images and rotate my NEFs. If I
wasn't using NEFs, Windows XP would fine for browsing the images.
There are other programs that can rotate jpegs.

I use Nikon Capture to do initial editing and converting of my
NEFs. If I was only using jpegs, I'd bypass this program.

Photoshop Elements is a small version of Photoshop. I don't use it.

Photoshop 7 is my prefered editing and adjustment program. After
I've converted my NEFs to TIFF, I edit them here and save them as
photoshop files. When I want to display them on the Web, I convert
them to jpeg here.

I use them in the order listed.
Thanks Tony - What do you mean by "initial editing"? - and how does
it differ from "editing and adjusting"?
Why not go straight to PS7
What is the advantage of converting NEFs to TIFF?
--
nikon d-100
nikon 24-85 G
sigma 15-30 EX
SB-80dx
currently borrowing a sigma 70-200 2.8
work in camera store...borrow lots of other stuff..
--

'He who works his land will have abundant food, but he who chases fantasies will have his fill of poverty.' -- King Solomon
 

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