Rent generally brukar de olika tillverkarna inte att ha en automatik för att konvertera från ett program till ett annat.
Det generella svaret brukar vara att algoritmer, kameraprofiler och verktyg skiljer sig åt och att man inte kan garantera att bilderna kommer se lika ut i det nya programmet.
C1PRO har gjort lite för att förenkla. Fast någon helt automatisk process är det inte.
Se nedanstående.
You won’t have to rework your archives
Also note that I was going to include the version of the crane photo that I was presented with in Capture One after importing my Final Selects folder. As opposed to simply importing the file, this was done by using a Lightroom Catalog and Include Existing Adjustments. However, it actually looks so similar to the original version that there isn’t much point in doing so. You can migrate your work to Capture One and maintain the Lightroom look of your images, to a certain degree.
A lot of things aren’t imported along with your images. For example, any dust removable or cloning that you did to your originals in Lightroom will be lost. Moreover, you lose all Lightroom Local Adjustments. So, if you want to maintain a copy of the file in Capture One, you have a couple of choices. The first one is to save the Lightroom version as a TIFF, and bake your changes into the image.
The second option is to make the changes again in Capture One. Here, you need to be aware that the spot removal tool in Capture One works differently than in Lightroom. For detailed cloning it is generally better to jump into Photoshop anyway. If this is necessary, just save your image as a TIFF before importing it into Capture One. Note too that it has to be a TIFF because Capture One doesn’t support Photoshop PSD files. More on this later…