

Under Windows 7 this will be very similar, but I can’t really tell where the folder is on a Mac, as I don’t own one, and can’t try it out :)ītw.

#Dxo optics pro 8 tutorial windows 8
This is all under Windows 8 and Windows 8.1.

I suggest copying them to a separate folder first. Be careful opening the files in the AutoReover folder directly in Photoshop, as when you do, Photoshop will delete the recovery immediately. In that case you have to go under View/Options int the File explorer, and in the tab named View turn on Show hidden files. You can find the folder under System drive (C:)/Users/ your user name here/AppData/Roaming/Adobe Photoshop (CS6 or CC)/AutoRecover. It’s possible you will not see the AppData folder, as it’s hidden. What you need to do, is go directly into Photoshops Auto recovery folder, where it saves all the backups as PSB files (PSB is almost same as PSD, it just supports bigger files, it can be opened in Photoshop). And like pretty much everywhere else, it has features that have become standard and must be done well: Robust import/export options. It helps organize, edit, process, and export your images in a variety of ways. If it does not load, you still have a chance to get it. DXO Optics Pro falls into the same category of image application as Lightroom, Capture One Pro, and Bridge. If you are lucky, and Photoshop saved a backup, once you open it again, your file will be loaded automatically. This is so you are not interrupted in your work while Photoshop is saving. You can now export files from Lightroom to DxO Optics Pro, then export them back to Lightroom to continue working on them. For anyone using a consumer-grade lenses, an extra one or two hundred dollars spent on Optics Pro will elevate the image quality produced to close to that of a much more expensive lens. Recognising this, DxO has worked hard to make the latest versions integrate with Lightroom. DxO Optics Pro is an impressive product, and given what it does the price / performance ratio is attractive. There is also a second setting here, that should stay on, that is Save in Background. DxO Optics Pro works well, but is at a disadvantage to Lightroom in that it is not nearly as good at organising your photos. You can find this setting under Edit/Preferences/File Handling/Automatic save recover information every. There you can also change how often it’s saved. If you are painting in a mask, 5 minutes is a long enought time, to do a lot of work. I suggest changing this, so it saves a copy every 5 minutes. This is turned on by default, but it’s set to every 10 minutes. You could either learn to save regularly, or even better, use the Photoshops auto save function. One can’t really prevent a crash, but one can be prepared for one. But that’s normal, as the crashes are so rare, I never developed the habit to save regularly :) Have auto recovery save on For me it’s sometimes happens when I use a plug-in, or work with a very big image, and each time I of course forgot to save my work beforehand. At the time I had also tried capture one, but didnt feel it was as good as the others. IIRC On1 did well, with just a few preferring dxo and LR. Photoshop is a very solid piece of software, but as every other software, it tends to crash from time to time. Some years back I did a comparison on here between lightroom, dxo optics pro (as it was then) and On1 photo suite (again as it was) just processing as felt natural, rather than matching.
