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tegan
05-05-2008, 07:51 PM
How many of you have used plug-ins to Photoshop or other photo-editors?
How many use plug-ins more often than the program?

Tegan

Travis
05-07-2008, 11:50 AM
when i used Gimp i used plugins.... everything seems to be a plug in with gimp...

i find plug ins can be cranky if the third party isn't well resourced...

tegan
05-07-2008, 12:56 PM
I find that although the Nik plug-ins are rather pricey, they are very flexible and reliable.

Tegan

Travis
05-07-2008, 01:13 PM
I find that although the Nik plug-ins are rather pricey, they are very flexible and reliable.

Tegan


What are these? (NiK) are they Nikon sponsered softwares?

My 30day element trial expired... i've rarely used it aside from the first few days... so i didn't buy it...

Now I'm trying Capture NX and shooting RAW.... do NIK plugins work with Capture NX?

Alex Wilson
05-07-2008, 02:53 PM
I've got some scripts, such as Dr. Brown's Process 1-2-3 that are invaluable to my workflow.

For making some poster-sized prints, I used a plugin to scale it up, and got better results than with the 10% method.

I used to a noise reduction plugin, but I haven't used it years. Back when I first started shooting digitally, I would religiously run the noise reduction filter on every image before starting to edit it -- and it took about 8 minutes for each file to run on my poor old computer.

For me, the "special effect" plugins have the same danger as some of the cheesy effect filters -- you might like the end result, but you risk the image looking like you ran a random filter without much thought being put into it. Just because you *can* pointilize an image, doesn't mean you *should*. The real power of those filters (and plugins) is using them the help build up subtle image effects.

But there's a lot of useful utility plugins (lens correction, resizing, etc.) that provide key missing (or at least enhanced) functionality from PhotoShop.

tegan
05-07-2008, 03:34 PM
What are these? (NiK) are they Nikon sponsered softwares?

My 30day element trial expired... i've rarely used it aside from the first few days... so i didn't buy it...

Now I'm trying Capture NX and shooting RAW.... do NIK plugins work with Capture NX?

I don't think Nik is at all related to Nikon. Check out www.niksoftware.com.
Viveza and Colour FX are both quite good and useful to speed up postprocessing.

Tegan

tegan
05-07-2008, 03:52 PM
I've got some scripts, such as Dr. Brown's Process 1-2-3 that are invaluable to my workflow.

For me, the "special effect" plugins have the same danger as some of the cheesy effect filters -- you might like the end result, but you risk the image looking like you ran a random filter without much thought being put into it. Just because you *can* pointilize an image, doesn't mean you *should*. The real power of those filters (and plugins) is using them the help build up subtle image effects.

But there's a lot of useful utility plugins (lens correction, resizing, etc.) that provide key missing (or at least enhanced) functionality from PhotoShop.

Sure, some of the free and shareware plug-ins in the special effect area are somewhat silly. I do however find software filters extremely useful, since you can apply them with various controls to a select part of your image, which is not possible with the hard camera filter.

Conversely, a hard polarizer can do things that are not possible with a software polarizer, but a software polarizer can still improve the sky.

Tegan

scalespeeder
09-11-2008, 02:45 AM
I've started to run Noise Ninja with almost every photo I edit(having set up custom profiles for my camera).

The only special effects plug-in I've used a lot is melancholytron by flaming pear, it adds a darkening / sepia / blur vignette than can be interesting some times.

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2093/2518596941_f370073b2b.jpg

tegan
09-11-2008, 07:36 AM
I've started to run Noise Ninja with almost every photo I edit(having set up custom profiles for my camera).

The only special effects plug-in I've used a lot is melancholytron by flaming pear, it adds a darkening / sepia / blur vignette than can be interesting some times.

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2093/2518596941_f370073b2b.jpg

Interesting shot. Take a look at the software filters from Nik Software or Tiffen. You are likely to get more use out of them, than the special effects filters.

Tegan

reijo
09-11-2008, 05:45 PM
I have the viveza plug in from Nik software. I find it very useful and use it almost exclusively after universal adjustments in camera raw.
It is great because you can adjust separate parts of the photo. And if you convert to smart filter first you can go back and modify your adjustments later.

tegan
09-11-2008, 08:44 PM
I have the viveza plug in from Nik software. I find it very useful and use it almost exclusively after universal adjustments in camera raw.
It is great because you can adjust separate parts of the photo. And if you convert to smart filter first you can go back and modify your adjustments later.

Yes, Viveza is quite fast and handles complex shaped selections extremely well without layers or masks. I have been able to do some adjustments in Viveza that were too complex and time consuming for Photoshop and do it faster with great quality.

Tegan

tegan
09-24-2008, 08:32 PM
From Scalespeeder:
I've started to run Noise Ninja with almost every photo I edit(having set up custom profiles for my camera).

I have found that Noiseware Professional in standalone or plug-in is very flexible, adjustable and successful in reducing photo noise.

Tegan

pslove
09-24-2008, 11:54 PM
i've used both nik color efex pro 2.0 and digital film tools 55mm v6 and i like the latter alot more than nik. i find my digi tools are alot easier to fine tune and a little bit more intuitive than nik. i tend to use the silver reflector and vignette in digi the most applied as an overlay to get the saturated slightly overexposed look i tend to prefer my photos to have. i also use curvemiester curves 2.0 instead of the standard curves feature in photoshop. i feel like it generally allows for more tweaking especially when i want an edgier look to my photos. i like the individual graphs for rgb, and hsb.:D

tirediron
09-25-2008, 01:11 AM
I think I've got as much invested in plug-ins as in Photoshop itself... :eek: I like the Nik products, but I've also run across some good freeware stuff too. I do most of my post work in CaptureFX these days and really only us PS as a support system for [what I consider to be] crtical plug-ins (Which is going to make it realllllllly hard to justify shelling out the :twocents: for CS4.

tegan
09-25-2008, 09:00 AM
I think I've got as much invested in plug-ins as in Photoshop itself... :eek: I like the Nik products, but I've also run across some good freeware stuff too. I do most of my post work in CaptureFX these days and really only us PS as a support system for [what I consider to be] crtical plug-ins (Which is going to make it realllllllly hard to justify shelling out the :twocents: for CS4.

Well, if you are just using the plug-ins, then PaintShop Pro X2 is the cheap approach since that program runs all the plug-ins as well.

Tegan

mindforge
09-25-2008, 12:04 PM
At one point, I used the trials for several. Well, I almost always get the trials when I see them.

Noise ninja is great but gives a waxy or painted look to images sometimes. I would rely on instead working with noise. It is pretty cool to play with though.

I also used Nik software and found myself relying on it instead of doing the work myself which can be dangerous if you rely on it for long.

All these plug-ins are just tools to make it easier. It is better if you learn how to do it the real way and use the plug-ins as a hopping off point to learn how to do it yourself. You can create actions that do these plug-ins. Well, kind of. The plug-ins do offer the slide bars that let you control the impact of the design.

All in all though, Noise Ninja and Nik have been the best so far. Noise ninja saved a few pictures that had sentimental value but I would not use it in a professional setting. Nik is awesome to play with but most plug-in's were over the top.

tirediron
09-25-2008, 06:44 PM
Well, if you are just using the plug-ins, then PaintShop Pro X2 is the cheap approach since that program runs all the plug-ins as well.

Tegan

That's on my desktop too! :rolleyes: Interestingly enough, there are some plug-ins that it doesn't like especially, I can't remember off hand which, but I have found a few (commerical, not freeware) that it choked on.

tegan
09-25-2008, 07:38 PM
That's on my desktop too! :rolleyes: Interestingly enough, there are some plug-ins that it doesn't like especially, I can't remember off hand which, but I have found a few (commerical, not freeware) that it choked on.

That is often due to the program looking for the plug-in, in the wrong folder.
For a non-PC, I had a program that monitored what files, folders etc. the computer or program was accessing. It was extremely useful for correcting problems such as programs, plug-ins, not working.

Tegan