Fourth use Contrast, Micro contrast, Fine contrast and ClearView to get back the contrast. Third make small corrections (fine-tune) with Selective tone sliders (Highlights, Midtones, Shadows and Blacks sliders) Sometimes it works and sometimes does not. You need to play and move those rectangles around and change their size to get the result you want. It’s important how big are those rectangles and where you put them. With ‘Spot Smart Lighting’ you draw rectangles on the image. ‘General Smart Lighting’ adjusts image in general. Second adjust highlights and shadows with ‘Smart Lighting’ slider. First adjust the exposure with Exposure compensation The workflow in DxO is different as the workflow in Lightroom. If you push Highlights slider to the left the image gets dull so you need to push Midtones slider to the right to compensate. Shadows slider affects all midtones area and slightly blacks. ![]() Highlights slider in DxO also does not recreate as much highlights as Highlights slider in Lightroom. You can put gray scale in DxO and in Lightroom and compare how those sliders are different.
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