PS CC Camera Profile For D800

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
What Eduard said. ACR and Lightroom will read the camera information from the EXIF data and make the appropriate profiles available to you. There's a ton of them uploaded to your computer when you install the package.

There is a Camera Calibration section in ACR and you should see the D800 profiles in the drop down menu there.
 

Rock Daddeo

Senior Member
I was speaking specifically of the Filter>Lens Correction option within PhotoShop.

My copy of PhotoShop CC does not include a camera profile for the D800 (it does show a D700 camera profile and a few others). Also within the "Lens Correction" option I can choose my Nikon 16-35 f4 lens, but not my Tamron 70-300 f5.6 lens.

I tried the "Search Online" option within PS "Lens Correction," but no correct profile was available.

Maybe the bigger question is what's the best way to apply lens correction? In LR, PS or PS Camera Raw?
 

Horoscope Fish

Senior Member
I was speaking specifically of the Filter>Lens Correction option within PhotoShop.

My copy of PhotoShop CC does not include a camera profile for the D800 (it does show a D700 camera profile and a few others). Also within the "Lens Correction" option I can choose my Nikon 16-35 f4 lens, but not my Tamron 70-300 f5.6 lens.

I tried the "Search Online" option within PS "Lens Correction," but no correct profile was available.

Maybe the bigger question is what's the best way to apply lens correction? In LR, PS or PS Camera Raw?
This article on Lens Profile Support from Adobe explains much.

Personally, I have ACR set up to apply lens corrections automatically by default; It just seems easier to me.

...
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
I was speaking specifically of the Filter>Lens Correction option within PhotoShop.

My copy of PhotoShop CC does not include a camera profile for the D800 (it does show a D700 camera profile and a few others). Also within the "Lens Correction" option I can choose my Nikon 16-35 f4 lens, but not my Tamron 70-300 f5.6 lens.

I tried the "Search Online" option within PS "Lens Correction," but no correct profile was available.

Maybe the bigger question is what's the best way to apply lens correction? In LR, PS or PS Camera Raw?

Why would you expect a body type under lens correction? Lens corrections are purely based on the lens used and sensor type (DX v. FX). DxOMark does additional corrections that take the body/sensor into account, so perhaps that's what's confusing you? Outside of the camera profiles for Standard, Neutral, Vivid, etc. there are no other camera specific changes.
 

Rock Daddeo

Senior Member
Why would you expect a body type under lens correction? Lens corrections are purely based on the lens used and sensor type (DX v. FX). DxOMark does additional corrections that take the body/sensor into account, so perhaps that's what's confusing you? Outside of the camera profiles for Standard, Neutral, Vivid, etc. there are no other camera specific changes.

That's what I thought. But there it is in PS, an option to select BOTH the camera body and lens for correction.
 

BackdoorArts

Senior Member
That's what I thought. But there it is in PS, an option to select BOTH the camera body and lens for correction.

Ah, you're talking about in the Len Correction Filter, not in Camera RAW. I do not know why there are only a very limited number of cameras listed in there, but I suspect it has something to do with how they handle, or do not handle, certain types of corrections when producing jpegs. There are a lot of cameras not in there, and I suspect it's because if you're using them then you're likely doing your corrections against the RAW images before going into PS.

I did play with it, and after choosing a specific lens and then toggling through various camera bodies that are available, there seems to be no impact going from one camera body to the next - which is what I was hoping would be the case. I'm guessing that this is there to deal with P&S and fixed lens cameras. If you're shooting with a D800 and want to correct here, just pick your lens and you're done.
 
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