View Full Version : Opening Canon 1000D files in CS2
pgbphotographytas
21-10-2009, 11:00am
Hi,
I have just found that Photoshop CS2 won't open the RAW files off my 1000D, do I need to upgrade to CS3/4 to make this happen?
Paul
yummymummy
21-10-2009, 11:04am
Hey Paul, I have CS3 and it wont open my raw files in there either :( hoping you get an answer so I know what to do.lol
I believe CS4 will open files from the newer Canon cameras (1000D, 5DII etc), so an upgrade is one solution, albeit a rather expensive one.
A cheaper alternative would be to use Canon's DPP software which comes bundled with your camera to do the RAW conversion and then open the resulting .tif or .jpg files with CS2 for any further processing.
ameerat42
21-10-2009, 11:43am
Hey pgb... Have you checked the adobe site for a plugin first. Am...
I think you'll need to change Camera brands Paul, lol
CS4 is the minimum version (with latest ACR) or Lightroom 2.5.
Welcome to the wonderful world of adobe backward compatibility.
Pentax has DNG support in the camera ;)
charton
21-10-2009, 1:15pm
Paul, with the 50D I open the files in DPP then 'save as' RAW/JPEG/Tiff in desktop folder (backed up). Check you have the update of DPP as it will save both formats at once.
pgbphotographytas
21-10-2009, 1:53pm
Thanks for all the advice, I have DPP installed and have also found Picasa will open them but this means changing my work flow from what I have done in the past. I guess it is not something that can be avoided :(
Paul
You can download a RAW to DNG converter from the adobe site, convert the CR2 to DNG and than load that into CS2.
Alternative options: DPP or PSE.
IMO DPP is much better at raw conversion than ACR, I use DPP then Photoshop even though ACR will open my files.
Nikolas
21-10-2009, 9:23pm
You can download a RAW to DNG converter from the adobe site, convert the CR2 to DNG and than load that into CS2.
Alternative options: DPP or PSE.
What he said, DNG converter works the same as raw converter and it's a free download and you don't lose quality.
IMO DPP is much better at raw conversion than ACR,
Horses for courses. Sometimes DPP is much better, sometimes ACR blows DPP out of the water. Especially on (slightly) overexposed images, ACR does a far better job than DPP.
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