So I picked up a copy of NegMaster. Negative Lab Pro seems pretty good for most things, but I don't use Lightroom and am not planning on starting. Quick, non thorough review of NegMaster:
Seems to do what it says on the tin, has a nice little palette interface - very polished looking. I think v2.2 is currently in beta (I didn't try the old version) and some of the keyboard commands don't sync up to the right adjustment layers. It looks like most of the processing happens in regular PS layers, which is nice from a learning perspective since you can dissect it. The basic conversion does NOT happen in an adjustment layer. You bring in your RAW file through ACR, white balance on the film rebate, then invert with a preset (just inverts the scan with curves) which applies a special profile, which I suspect is some variation of a linear gamma. Then you open the file in PS, and you run the conversion, which appears to be some sort of auto curves, but probably in the linear gamma color space. The output of that requires some additional on some of the scans I played around with.
I'm glad I purchased it since I learned some new things, but I suspect I'll continue to invert with my homemade actions. The custom profile does help - I'm sure if you were knowledgeable enough, you could do the right steps in a linear gamma color space and then convert.
So, not a bad tool. If you are happy with NLP, probably stick with it, but if you are looking for something more PS centric, it might be worth it.
Seems to do what it says on the tin, has a nice little palette interface - very polished looking. I think v2.2 is currently in beta (I didn't try the old version) and some of the keyboard commands don't sync up to the right adjustment layers. It looks like most of the processing happens in regular PS layers, which is nice from a learning perspective since you can dissect it. The basic conversion does NOT happen in an adjustment layer. You bring in your RAW file through ACR, white balance on the film rebate, then invert with a preset (just inverts the scan with curves) which applies a special profile, which I suspect is some variation of a linear gamma. Then you open the file in PS, and you run the conversion, which appears to be some sort of auto curves, but probably in the linear gamma color space. The output of that requires some additional on some of the scans I played around with.
I'm glad I purchased it since I learned some new things, but I suspect I'll continue to invert with my homemade actions. The custom profile does help - I'm sure if you were knowledgeable enough, you could do the right steps in a linear gamma color space and then convert.
So, not a bad tool. If you are happy with NLP, probably stick with it, but if you are looking for something more PS centric, it might be worth it.