I do not really use DPP with this feature very often, but what exactly does DLO do that permits it to be used outside of supported lens/body combinations? My limited understanding is that it corrects sharpness of a particular lens at a particular aperture across the field - does this require a specific profile (hence the "supported" lens concept)? How can this data or profile be applied to lenses that are not profiled and may exhibit different sharpness variations across their field?
I suppose it is one thing to "trick" DPP into applying some correction to raw data, it's another thing to get it to adapt its profile to a non-supported lens in a "correct" way.
Forgive my ignorance, I may be way overthinking this and probably do not understand just what DLO does.
Forge onward!
kirk
Yes you're right. If Canon for instance decides to provide a profile for the tamron 28-75, it will certainly provide even better results than what I have posted.
However what I have noticed is that even using a non dedicated profile provides better results than nothing. Certainly it's not 100% correct, but if it improves the overall IQ, why not use it ?
BTW : DLO doesn't correct sharpness only but also aberrations and other things...
See : http://web.canon.jp …g/dlo/factor/index02.html![]()






