The best raw editor is the one that you are comfortable using.
Raw editors come in many flavors. The right raw editor for you will depend on your needs and your skill level. Infrared photography complicates this by requiring features less commonly used in visible light photography, such as unusual white balancing and color swapping. Here is a summary of raw editors to help you find the best raw editor for you.
Desktop | Mobile | Color Swap Methods | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Name | License | Mac | Win | Linux | Android | iPad | iPhone | White Balance | Channel Mixer | Invert | Hue | LUTs | Video | Notes |
Adobe Lightroom | subscription | Needs DCP profiles | via XMP profiles | Great ecosystem, leading masking | ||||||||||
Adobe Lightroom Classic | subscription | Needs DCP profiles | via XMP profiles | LR plus better catalog, printing, import, & export | ||||||||||
Adobe Photoshop | subscription | Needs DCP profiles | Yes | Industry standard for desktop, IR Actions, iPad app bad for IR | ||||||||||
Canon Digital Photo Professional | desktop free, mobile subscription | Limited | For Canon pixel-peepers making large prints | |||||||||||
Capture One | license or subscription | Pass for IR unless you already own C1 | ||||||||||||
darktable | free open source | Yes | Excellent free open source | |||||||||||
DxO PhotoLab 7 | license | & DCP | Yes | Easy to use, but need Elite edition | ||||||||||
ON1 Photo RAW | license or subscription | Yes | Easy to use, IR Presets, preset WB bug (see notes below) | |||||||||||
Photomator | license | Yes | Great Mac-only solution cross-device | |||||||||||
Pixelmator Pro | license | Yes | Great Mac-only solution with layers | |||||||||||
RawTherapee | free open source | Yes | Excellent free open source, great for monochrome | |||||||||||
Serif Affinity Photo 2 | separate license each platform | Yes | Great non-subscription PS alternative | |||||||||||
Skylum Luminar Neo | license or subscription | & DCP | Yes | Some raw files not supported (see notes below), clean interface, easy to use |
Reviews Coming Soon
Notes
- DCP profile - A custom digital negative camera profile can be used to adjust the color temperature slider to set a good white balance in infrared. The Infrared Profile Pack includes custom profiles for hundreds of cameras.
- Channel Mixer - The ability to assign different red, green, or blue values to pixels. A common color swap is to assign blue to the red channel and red to the blue channel which results in a blue sky.
- Invert - The ability to invert the hues or colors of an image via an invert adjustment layer, curves invert, or levels invert.
- Hue - The ability to globally rotate hues by 180 degrees.
- LUTs - Color lookup table files with a .cube extension. Free LUTs are availlable at Updated Color Infrared LUTs v2.
- XMP - Adobe Enhanced profiles that can combine DCP files and LUTs. Build or buy enhanced profiles at Lightroom Infrared Color Swap Profiles.
Luminar Neo
I’ve received multiple reports indicating that while Luminar Neo supports their camera model, the program does not recognize raw files shot in IR. I had a similar problem when making a video on Luminar 4 a few years ago. At the time, it was unclear if this was an issue where the camera raw files from my Fujifilm X-T20 were not supported or were specific to IR. It appeared resolved in later versions since those files from the Fujifilm X-T20 are now recognized as raw. However, multiple people are now having the same issue with cameras that are listed as supported.
Be sure to test the trial version of Luminar with your raw files before purchasing. When editing your raw file, look for the blue “Raw” tag next to the Develop module name. If you don’t see it, your camera model is unsupported or Luminar cannot recognize IR images shot in raw.
Here is a list of Luminar-supported cameras.
ON1 Photo RAW
There is a known bug in some versions of ON1 Photo RAW impacting presets and white balance. Here are the steps to reproduce this issue.
- Disable the
K
(Kelvin) button in the White Balance panel. Since IR light has a color temperature below 2,000° K, non-Kelvin mode helps to set a good white balance. - Use the picker to set a white balance.
- Apply a preset from the ON1 Photo RAW Infrared Presets.
- A bug causes the state of the
K
button to be toggled when a preset is applied. This state change is not reflected on theK
button itself. This will change the white balance. - Workaround: After applying a preset, in the White Balance panel, toggle the
K
button on and off. Set a new White Balance.