is this a problem?
thanks
is this a problem?
thanks
10 would not work.
9.8 did.
but it looks in a folder that is no longer there.
so i remade to folder and put raw images in it.
but it could not find files there.
how do i totally remove the software so it does not remember where the files used to be.
yes in win 7 i removed the program in the usual way.
help!
thanks all
Hi. You can only use CC, if your MAc meets the requirements.
In my case, it doesn't. I have Photoshop Cs5, a Canon 5d mark 3 and a 10.7. Mac-
now the new RAW DNG converter won't work on the old mac and the old converters links don't work either.
Any ideas?
I have come across a recent problem with the DNG Converter. This happens with both version 10.0 and the most recent one 10.1. Certain CR2 files from a Canon GX7 camera will not convert to DNG. I get the message "There was not enough memory". It is hard for me to believe I do not have enough memory as my computer is new and has ample RAM.
Out of a shoot of say 50 images, all shot at the same time with the same camera, only a few will not convert and I can not tell what is different about the problem files from the ones that do convert. All the raw files are visible in bridge and Lightroom, and all open in camera raw, but some will not be converted to the dng format in the DNG converter.
Anyone have this problem? I can supply the raw files if necessary.
Two things I want to get out of the way first:
I wanted to edit NEF files, from my Nikon D5600, using Lightroom Classic CC, so when I tried importing the NEF files, I would get an error that read "Some import operations were not performed." When I googled the problem I read about converting the NEF Files into DNG files. So then I tried using the "Copy as DNG" tool in Lightroom while importing, and received the same error as before. Upon further googling and reading, I read about Adobe DNG Converter v8.8 and downloaded it from Adobe's website. But whenever tried to covert the files, I received an error that reads "The source folder does not contain any supported raw files."
The following is a list of the different methods that I tried using
I simply do not understand what I am doing wrong. I would greatly appreciate your help.
(As a foot note: I understand that I have mentioned having problems with both LightroomCC and DNG Converter. This is intentional and because I would also like to know I if a doing something wrong while using Lightroom. That being said, a similar discussion will be posted in the Lightroom Community.)
I've spent the last hour trying to find a download of DNG Converter version 8. I keep getting sent to this page and when I click the links to get to the download page, I get the error message:
*****
The requested URL /pub/adobe/dng/mac/DNGConverter_8_8.dmg was not found on this server.
*****
Does anyone know where I can download it?
Thanks
Hello,
I tried out the lossy DNG format with a lot of pictures.
For most pictures I can't find any visible differences.
But I found also some pictures with very noticible visible differences between lossless and lossy DNG.
It seems that the lossy DNG format has problems with dark pictures with small light sources for example
the stars in the dark sky or the red lights of an aeroplane in the dark sky.
I have an example where you can see red security lights of a great antenna on top of a mountain.
Surprisingly with this extreme example the JPG versions looks much better as the lossy DNG version of my source lossless DNG.
Here is the cropped JPG from the lossless DNG (file size 10877KB):
Between this JPG and the lossless DNG file is no visible difference.
And here a JPG from the lossy DNG (file size 13261KB):
Between this JPG and the source lossy DNG file is no visible difference.
The source of both DNG files was a NEF File from a Nikon D7100.
Also interessting is, that for this excample the file size of the lossy DNG is greater than the lossless DNG. This seems crasy IMHO.
I was very surprised, that JPG result is is much better than the lossy DNG for this case.
Perhaps there is a hidden bug in the lossy DNG conversion process.
I hope Adobe can look in to this. If you need the original NEF file let me know.
To whom it may concern,
Prelude: For simplicity I'll only talk about Windows in the following, we have not established the status of this on the Mac. We may but I will not update this forum post on that. It will stay what it is and we'll hope for the best. I wish there was a more suitable bug reporting channel but I found none.
We use Adobe DNG converter's conversion routines to "linear" DNGs, that is to readily demosaiced DNGs.
Like this: <dngConverterApp> -u -l -p0 -d <output> <input>
Of course you could get the according settings in place using the graphical user interface if you wanted to.
Now, the problem we located exists in the demosaicing of over exposed input. Why would it be over exposed? Because it is being used in assembling high dynamic range imagery. The problem is that in such over exposed areas pixels show up that should not. We have established that this behavior started with DNG converter 5.7 and has been in effect ever since. It was not exhibited at all by DNG converter 5.6 and below.
The following is plain Gamma 1.0 encoded data as resides in the demosaiced DNG that has been subjected to a crude Levels adjustment in PS so that the problem becomes plainly visible on this forum. In reality it is much more subtle but it is causing trouble in the HDR image creation I mentioned.
Of course there is a sample image to go along with this, that is really a junk photo by itself from a recent hardware test:
http://oldendorf.net/boards/DNG_bug_sample.dng
Just to clarify, this is a repro photo of a color negative and yes it has been deliberately over exposed.
The crop you are seeing above is from the tree trunks and we are viewing it at 200% zoom.
An 8 year old bug, alright. It would be nice if it could be fixed now that the two DNG Converter versions to diff have been conveniently pointed out.
I found an issue with how DNG converter converts Nikon D810 NEF files. NEF image size is 7380x4928 and doesn't have any masked pixels. The final size of the image after processing is 7360x4912, which means that there is a padding of 10 pixels on top and bottom and 8 pixels on left and right of the image. However, the image in the DNG has a size of 7372x4920. That should not happen, since there are no masked pixels in the NEF file. Moreover, DNG says that the crop origin is at 12x8. That leaves zero padding at the right and bottom of the image for CFA interpolation. This is confirmed by the dng_validate.exe tool in the DNG SDK, which outputs this:
*** Warning: Too little padding on right edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
*** Warning: Too little padding on bottom edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
I am using the latest DNG converter (10.2.0.894). Has anybody else noticed this? Any chances this is going to get fixed soon? Not a huge issue, but this should be really easy to fix. I don't want to use Nikon's CaptuerNX, I never have.
Hi,
I took a ton of pictures in RAW today on my Canon EOS Rebel SL1. I downloaded the DNG converter in hopes of being able to edit them, but the program keeps telling me it can't find the CR2 files (even though I am selecting the folder where all of the files are). Can someone tell me how to fix this? I am on a Mac, and would really rather use DNG program because some of those online converter sites are very sketchy.
Thanks!
I´m trying to create a camera profile to edit my infrared photos. My camara is Sony DSC-F828. I save the SRF file in Lightroom as DNG. Then I open this file in the Adobe DNG Profile Editor.But when I want to change the temperature under "color-matrices", then "the operation could not be completed" appears. I tried to convert the SRF to DNG also with ACR, but the same reaction.
More than 1 year ago, I managed to create a profile, but I´m not sure, if the version of the editor was the same. Does anyone habe an idea?
Hi,
I'm having a bit of trouble with Adobe DNG converter.
Since yesterday the converter has been applying an odd profile when converting NEF files from my D750, Adjustments to the exposure and white balance are most noticeable, any ideas what's happening and why?
Changing the monitor colour profile doesn't make a difference and it's the same result with different versions of DNG converter.
Thanks for any help!
Nikon D750 - NEF
Windows 10 64bit - latest updates applied
I have a few questions regarding the Adobe DNG SDK and if i am using it correctly.
So the flow of my program works as follows: i read a custom binary file containing the raw data.
This will be the buffer of my output DNG. I can open the produced DNG in the windows preview correctly and
also in Adobe Photoshop, but if I want to open it in some other programs like LibRaw or RawTherapee, the image
is just completely black.
I will post my programm and the log of DNGValidate.exe , perhaps you have an idea what went wrong.
Here is a link of my DNG.
See my program below
#include "DNGWriter.h"
namespace Unpacker {
dng_error_code CDNGWriter::writeDNG(byte *pFrame, const std::string &fileName) {
try {
m_pDngImage.Reset(m_dngHost.Make_dng_image(m_imageRect, 1, m_depth == 8 ? ttByte : ttShort));
m_dngBuffer.fArea = m_imageRect;
m_dngBuffer.fPlane = 0;
m_dngBuffer.fPlanes = 1;
m_dngBuffer.fRowStep = m_dngBuffer.fPlanes * m_imageRect.W();
m_dngBuffer.fColStep = m_dngBuffer.fPlanes;
m_dngBuffer.fPlaneStep = 1;
m_dngBuffer.fPixelType = m_depth == 8 ? ttByte : ttShort;
m_dngBuffer.fPixelSize = TagTypeSize(m_depth == 8 ? ttByte : ttShort);
m_dngBuffer.fData = pFrame;
m_pDngImage->Put(m_dngBuffer);
// -------------------------------------------------------------
// Write DNG file
// -------------------------------------------------------------
// Assign Raw image data.
m_pDngNegative->SetStage1Image(m_pDngImage);
// Compute linearized and range mapped image
m_pDngNegative->BuildStage2Image(m_dngHost);
// Compute demosaiced image (used by preview and thumbnail)
m_pDngNegative->BuildStage3Image(m_dngHost);
// Update XMP / EXIF
m_pDngNegative->SynchronizeMetadata();
// Update IPTC
m_pDngNegative->RebuildIPTC(true);
// Create stream writer for output file
dng_file_stream fstream(fileName.c_str(), true);
// Create thumbnail
dng_image_preview thumbnail;
dng_render render(m_dngHost, *m_pDngNegative);
render.SetFinalSpace(dng_space_sRGB::Get());
render.SetFinalPixelType(m_depth == 8 ? ttByte : ttSShort);
render.SetMaximumSize(1 << m_depth);
thumbnail.fImage.Reset(render.Render());
AutoPtr<dng_image_writer> oWriter(new dng_image_writer());
oWriter->WriteDNG(m_dngHost, fstream, *m_pDngNegative.Get(), NULL, dngVersion_1_3_0_0, ccUncompressed);
} catch (const dng_exception &ex) {
return ex.ErrorCode();
} catch (...) {
return dng_error_none;
}
return dng_error_none;
}
////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// /////////////
dng_error_code CDNGWriter::setup(int rows, int cols, int depth) {
try {
m_depth = depth;
m_imageRect = dng_rect(cols, rows);
// Set DNG version
// Remarks: Tag [DNGVersion] / [50706]
// dngVersion default is the most recent one with 1.4.0.0
m_dngHost.SetSaveDNGVersion(dngVersion_SaveDefault);
// Set DNG type to RAW DNG
// Remarks: Store Bayer CFA data and not already processed data
m_dngHost.SetSaveLinearDNG(false);
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
// DNG Negative Settings
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
m_pDngNegative.Reset(m_dngHost.Make_dng_negative());
// Set camera model
// Remarks: Tag [UniqueCameraModel] / [50708]
m_pDngNegative->SetModelName("MyModel");
// Set localized camera model
// Remarks: Tag [UniqueCameraModel] / [50709]
m_pDngNegative->SetLocalName("Grass hopper");
// Set colorkey information
// Remarks: Tag
m_pDngNegative->SetColorKeys(colorKeyRed, colorKeyGreen, colorKeyBlue);
// Set bayer pattern information
// Remarks: Tag [CFAPlaneColor] / [50710] and [CFALayout] / [50711]
// bayer pattern depends on the colorkey set by
// dngNegative->SetColorKeys(colorKeyRed, colorKeyGreen, colorKeyBlue);
// In this case: 3 means GBGR bayer pattern
m_pDngNegative->SetBayerMosaic(3);
// Set colorchannel information
m_pDngNegative->SetColorChannels(3);
// Set linearization table
// Remarks: Tag [LinearizationTable] / [50712]
// Calculate bit limit
const uint8 m_unBitLimit = 0x01 << m_depth;
AutoPtr<dng_memory_block> oCurve(m_dngHost.Allocate(sizeof(uint8)*m_unBitLimit));
for (int32 i = 0; i < m_unBitLimit; i++) {
uint8 *pulItem = oCurve->Buffer_uint8() + i;
*pulItem = (uint8)(i);
}
m_pDngNegative->SetLinearization(oCurve);
// Set scale to square pixel
// Remarks: Tag [DefaultScale] / [50718]
m_pDngNegative->SetDefaultScale(dng_urational(1, 1), dng_urational(1, 1));
// Set pixel area
// Remarks: Tag [DefaultCropOrigin] / [50719]
m_pDngNegative->SetDefaultCropOrigin(0, 0);
// Set pixel area
// Remarks: Tag [DefaultCropSize] / [50720]
m_pDngNegative->SetDefaultCropSize(m_imageRect.W(), m_imageRect.H());
// Set active area
m_pDngNegative->SetActiveArea(m_imageRect);
m_pDngNegative->SetOriginalRawFileName("testdummi.bin");
m_pDngNegative->SetColorKeys(colorKeyRed, colorKeyGreen, colorKeyBlue);
// Set white LEVEL, value where the image is supposed to be white
m_pDngNegative->SetWhiteLevel((0x01 << m_depth) - 1); // 2^bpp -1
// Set black LEVEL, value where the image is supposed to be black
//m_pDngNegative->SetBlackLevel(1);
// Set baseline exposure
// Remarks: Tag [BaselineExposure] / [50730]
m_pDngNegative->SetBaselineExposure(0.0);
// Set if noise reduction is already applied on RAW data
// Remarks: Tag [NoiseReductionApplied] / [50935]
m_pDngNegative->SetNoiseReductionApplied(dng_urational(0, 1));
m_pDngNegative->SetAsShotProfileName("");
m_pDngNegative->SetBaselineNoise(1.0);
m_pDngNegative->SetBaselineSharpness(1.0);
m_pDngNegative->SetBaseOrientation(dng_orientation::Normal());
m_pDngNegative->SetLinearResponseLimit(1.0);
// Set camera neutral coordinates
// Remarks: Tag [AsShotNeutral] / [50728]
dng_vector pNeutral;
pNeutral.SetIdentity(3);
m_pDngNegative->SetCameraNeutral(pNeutral);
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
// DNG EXIF Settings
// ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------------------
m_pDngExif = m_pDngNegative->GetExif();
// Set Camera Make
// Remarks: Tag [Make] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fMake.Set_ASCII("PointGrey");
// Set Camera Model
// Remarks: Tag [Model] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fModel.Set_ASCII("Grasshopper GS3-U3-41C6C-C");
// Set exposure time - Shutterspeed
// Remarks: Tag [ExposureTime] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->SetExposureTime(10.0 / 1000.0); // random exposure time
// Set ISO speed
// Remarks: Tag [ISOSpeed] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fISOSpeedRatings[0] = 400; // ISO should be 400
m_pDngExif->fISOSpeedRatings[1] = 0;
m_pDngExif->fISOSpeedRatings[2] = 0;
// Set focal length
// Remarks: Tag [FocalLength] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fFocalLength.Set_real64(7.0, 1000);
// Set lens info
// Remarks: Tag [LensInfo] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fLensInfo[0].Set_real64(10.0, 10);
m_pDngExif->fLensInfo[1].Set_real64(10.0, 10);
m_pDngExif->fLensInfo[2].Set_real64(4.0, 10);
m_pDngExif->fLensInfo[3].Set_real64(4.0, 10);
m_pDngExif->fBrightnessValue = dng_srational(0, 0);
// Set WB mode
// Remarks: Tag [WhiteBalance] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fWhiteBalance = 0;
// Set metering mode
// Remarks: Tag [MeteringMode] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fMeteringMode = 2;
// Set metering mode
// Remarks: Tag [ExposureBiasValue] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->fExposureBiasValue = dng_srational(0, 0);
// Set aperture value
// Remarks: Tag [ApertureValue] / [EXIF]
m_pDngExif->SetFNumber(2.4); // sunex lens apeture
// Set Date time
// poExif->fDateTime();
// Set GPS value [Future]
// -------------------------------------------------------------
// DNG Profile Settings: Simple color calibration
// -------------------------------------------------------------
AutoPtr<dng_camera_profile> profile(new dng_camera_profile);
profile->SetName("MyCompany");
profile->SetCalibrationIlluminant1(lsD50);
// Excerpt from the DNG specification :
// ColorMatrix1 defines a transformation matrix that converts XYZ values to reference camera native color space values,
// under the first calibration illuminant.The matrix values are stored in row scan order.
dng_matrix_3by3 xyzToCam = dng_matrix_3by3(
3.13386, -1.61687, -0.49061,
-0.97877, 1.91614, 0.03345,
0.07195, -0.22899, 1.40524
);
profile->SetColorMatrix1(xyzToCam);
profile->SetCopyright("MyCompany");
profile->SetWasReadFromDNG(false);
m_pDngNegative->AddProfile(profile);
} catch (const dng_exception &except) {
return except.ErrorCode();
} catch (...) {
return dng_error_unknown;
}
return dng_error_none;
}
}
And this is the log of DNGValidate
Validating "000000.dng"...
Uses little-endian byte order
Magic number = 42
IFD 0: Offset = 8, Entries = 55
NewSubFileType: Main Image
ImageWidth: 2048
ImageLength: 2048
BitsPerSample: 8 8 8
Compression: Uncompressed
PhotometricInterpretation: CFA
Make: "PointGrey"
Model: "Grasshopper GS3-U3-41C6C-C"
StripOffsets: Offset = 6004
Orientation: 1 - 0th row is top, 0th column is left
SamplesPerPixel: 3
RowsPerStrip: 2048
StripByteCounts: Count = 12582912
PlanarConfiguration: 1
DateTime: 2018:03:01 17:53:32
XMP: Count = 4618, Offset = 738
XMP: <?xpacket begin="\357\273\277" id="W5M0MpCehiHzreSzNTczkc9d"?>
XMP: <x:xmpmeta xmlns:x="adobe:ns:meta/" x:xmptk="XMP Core 5.6.0">
XMP: <rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#">
XMP: <rdf:Description rdf:about=""
XMP: xmlns:aux="http://ns.adobe.com/exif/1.0/aux/"
XMP: xmlns:xmp="http://ns.adobe.com/xap/1.0/"
XMP: aux:LensInfo="100/10 100/10 40/10 40/10"
XMP: aux:Lens="10.0 mm f/4.0"
XMP: xmp:ModifyDate="2018-03-01T17:53:32+01:00"
XMP: xmp:MetadataDate="2018-03-01T17:53:32+01:00"/>
XMP: </rdf:RDF>
XMP: </x:xmpmeta>
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP:
XMP: <?xpacket end="w"?>
CFARepeatPatternDim: Rows = 2, Cols = 2
CFAPattern:
Green Blue
Red Green
ExifIFD: 5780
DNGVersion: 1.4.0.0
DNGBackwardVersion: 1.1.0.0
UniqueCameraModel: "Reality 7"
LocalizedCameraModel: "Grass hopper"
CFAPlaneColor: Red Green Blue
CFALayout: Rectangular (or square) layout
LinearizationTable:
BlackLevelRepeatDim: Rows = 1, Cols = 1
BlackLevel: 1.00 1.00 1.00
WhiteLevel: 255 255 255
DefaultScale: H = 1.0000 V = 1.0000
DefaultCropOrigin: H = 0.00 V = 0.00
DefaultCropSize: H = 2048.00 V = 2048.00
ColorMatrix1:
3.1339 -1.6169 -0.4906
-0.9788 1.9161 0.0335
0.0720 -0.2290 1.4052
AnalogBalance: 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
AsShotNeutral: 1.0000 1.0000 1.0000
BaselineExposure: +0.00
BaselineNoise: 1.00
BaselineSharpness: 1.00
BayerGreenSplit: 0
LinearResponseLimit: 1.00
LensInfo: 10.0 mm f/4.0
AntiAliasStrength: 1.00
ShadowScale: 1.0000
CalibrationIlluminant1: D50
BestQualityScale: 1.0000
RawDataUniqueID: <000000000000000050068b0e9fed9be2>
OriginalRawFileName: "testdummi.bin"
ActiveArea: T = 0 L = 0 B = 2048 R = 2048
NoiseReductionApplied: 0/1
ProfileName: "Reality7"
ProfileEmbedPolicy: Allow copying
ProfileCopyright: "Reality7"
RawImageDigest: <da1dde5cd511616e7cec7ba6d70138b5>
OriginalDefaultFinalSize: H = 0 V = 0
OriginalDefaultCropSize: H = 0.00 V = 0.00
NextIFD = 0
Exif IFD: Offset = 5780, Entries = 11
ExposureTime: 1/100.0 sec
FNumber: f/2.40
ISOSpeedRatings: 400
ExifVersion: 2.30
ShutterSpeedValue: 1/100.0 sec
ApertureValue: f/2.40
MeteringMode: CenterWeightedAverage
FocalLength: 7.0 mm
WhiteBalance: Auto white balance
LensSpecificationExif: 10.0 mm f/4.0
LensModelExif: "10.0 mm f/4.0"
NextIFD = 0
*** Warning: Too little padding on left edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
*** Warning: Too little padding on top edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
*** Warning: Too little padding on right edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
*** Warning: Too little padding on bottom edge of CFA image (possible interpolation artifacts) ***
Raw image read time: 0.013 sec
FindRawImageDigest time: 0.066 sec
Linearization time: 0.032 sec
Interpolate time: 0.067 sec
Validation complete
Thank you in advance!
I created a new profile for a Canon 6D using the Adobe DNG Profile Editor, and saved it in the Adobe\CameraRaw\CameraProfiles\Camera\Canon EOS 6D directory (which already had the normal five Adobe Profiles).
I noticed that the new profile is 325KB, while the normal ones are 272KB.
Camera Raw (version 8.4.1.200) does not recognize/display the new profile in the Camera Calibration tab. Any suggestions?
Hi Adobe-Users,
in advance: Sorry for my english, I try my very best. If anybody speaks german: it would be much more easier.
I've got lots of troubles with my Lightroom 5.7.1 (Camera Raw 8.7.1.) at Windows 7, 64 bit, Intel Core i7-4510U, 8GB RAM.
THE ONLY SOLUTION MAY BE DNG CONVERTER.
But first the main problem: Lightroom can't work with Sonys ARW-Files (ILCE-A7M2). Adobe Cameras supported by Camera Raw says, it should work but it doesn't.
Some people say, the only solution may be to convert the files with DNG Converter, but the program (current version 10.2) doesn't work - I can't start it, an error pops up, that's all. But if I copy the program-files to an usb-stick and start it (directly from stick) on my girlfriends computer (very old, very slow) it starts. WTF?
Are there any people who can tell me, what's wrong with my system?
For information: In addition to Lightroom it runs Adobe CS 6. And no, I don't want to upgrade to Adobe CC, because it's too expensive at the moment.
Best regards
Daniel
Hello! I am attempting to create a profile in the dng profile editor, but am not having any luck using the color matrices tab. I keep getting an error that says "the operation could not be completed" when I try and adjust my white balance. I get this same error when I try and adjust anything, but this is the function I really need. I did change my compatibility from camera raw 2.4 and later in lightroom, but that doesn't seem to matter.
Any suggestions? Thanks!
I have a Hasselblad digital back that delivers a slight greenish tint out of the camera. The actual color temperature is pretty close, but it's necessary to add something like +60 magenta tint to get the white balance correct. This occurs whether viewed in ACR, Photoshop, Hasselblad Phocus, and MAC Preview.
Using the DNG Profile Editor I had expected that the software would use the neutral patch on the color chart to correct the white balance during the process of generating the profile, but that does not seem to correct the green tint.
Can I even solve the issue I'm trying to address in this manner and if so what might I examine to determine what I am doing incorrectly ?
Hi all,
looking for some help.
I use photoshop CS5 and lightroom 2 on a IMAC G5 20inch (2006 model) OSx 10.7.5
DNG files are opening fine in photoshop but in lightroom it is saying
"The file appears to be unsupported or damaged"
DNG version is 8.4.0.199
how can i fix this?
i dont want to upgrade photoshop or lightroom as it good for what i need.
appreciate some help