So, a few years ago, I bought a Sony iclc camera and it came with an offer for a free copy of Capture One. I had never worked with RAW files before and did not see the point until I started working with Capture One. It really opened my eyes to the expanded possibilities of working with RAW files. But my copy of Capture One is limited to only opening files that were captured on a Sony ICLC camera. I used to shoot with a Pentax camera and have many PEF files from that camera that I would like to play with, but I cannot work with them in Capture One. I recently upgraded to PaintShop 2021 Ultimate and it came with a free copy of AfterShot 3. I was pretty excited to try it out on some of my old PEF files. I opened some and I was immediately disappointed in the options it offered for working on RAW files. I mean, it really only has the very basic minimum of photo editing and enhancement option. I bet I could find a much better editor for free out there with ease.
So an AD popped up in the AfterShot 3 program offering an upgrade to AfterShot Pro 3 for only $19.99. Now that is a pretty low price and I would not mind paying if, I am going to really get something. I mean, I can get Abobe Essentials for only $49.99 right now. So, my question is, how much of a difference is there between AfterShot 3 and AfterShot Pro 3? It had better be a pretty big improvement, if you ask me, because there is not much to AfterShot 3 basic. Comparing AfterShot Pro to Capture One, how would you rate them against each other? Or should I just spend an extra $30 and grab Adobe Essentials for $50 while it is on Cyber Monday extended sale?
How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
- jungleexplorer
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How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
Are you absolutely sure there are no absolutes?
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Re: How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
If I wanted to use a musical analogy, I'd say that Capture One is a Mahler symphony; AfterShot 3 is like randomly banging a dustbin lid with a dog-dirt covered stick - and you're holding the end of the stick the dog got to...
- jungleexplorer
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Re: How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
So I take it you are not too impressed with AfterShot. 
Are you absolutely sure there are no absolutes?
Re: How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
I don't know that anyone is following this thread, but I want to add a few comments on the ASP3 v. Capture One question.
I was a BIG fan of ASP, immediately and eagerly purchasing each new release. The fact that Corel didn't produce an ASP4 in 2017 or 2018 didn't bother me much, as the program met my needs as a nascent photographer. But in 2019, as my skills grew, so did my impatience with the absence of an update. So at some point in that year I sent an email to the company's customer support team asking whether ASP4 was in the works. After an exchange of three or four emails, a representative finally told me that Corel was working on ASP4 at that time. That turned out not to be true; what Corel was working on at that time was a collection of new camera profiles for use in ASP3. By then, it had been more than three years since the release of ASP3, so I concluded there wasn't going to be an ASP4 and decided to purchase Capture One (a decision aided by the fact that in November of 2019, Capture One offered the then-forthcoming version 20 free to those who purchased version 12). I've not made a better decision when it comes to computer software.
In short, Capture One is FAR superior to ASP. Yes, there is a steeper learning curve and it takes time to adjust to the myriad of customization options available to the CO user, but tutorial and webinar support, both from the CO website and on Youtube, is superb, and the results on images processed by the application are stunning. Other than cost of purchase (CO Pro full version license costs $299; annual upgrades to new versions are $159, less 20% if purchased during pre-release offer; camera brand-specific versions are $129) and simplicity of use, I can't think of a way in which CO isn't FAR, FAR better than ASP; it's truly not even close.
If in the future Corel somehow releases ASP4, I'll be happy for the company and for the people whose needs it meets, but I won't buy it. I'm now a CO convert.
I was a BIG fan of ASP, immediately and eagerly purchasing each new release. The fact that Corel didn't produce an ASP4 in 2017 or 2018 didn't bother me much, as the program met my needs as a nascent photographer. But in 2019, as my skills grew, so did my impatience with the absence of an update. So at some point in that year I sent an email to the company's customer support team asking whether ASP4 was in the works. After an exchange of three or four emails, a representative finally told me that Corel was working on ASP4 at that time. That turned out not to be true; what Corel was working on at that time was a collection of new camera profiles for use in ASP3. By then, it had been more than three years since the release of ASP3, so I concluded there wasn't going to be an ASP4 and decided to purchase Capture One (a decision aided by the fact that in November of 2019, Capture One offered the then-forthcoming version 20 free to those who purchased version 12). I've not made a better decision when it comes to computer software.
In short, Capture One is FAR superior to ASP. Yes, there is a steeper learning curve and it takes time to adjust to the myriad of customization options available to the CO user, but tutorial and webinar support, both from the CO website and on Youtube, is superb, and the results on images processed by the application are stunning. Other than cost of purchase (CO Pro full version license costs $299; annual upgrades to new versions are $159, less 20% if purchased during pre-release offer; camera brand-specific versions are $129) and simplicity of use, I can't think of a way in which CO isn't FAR, FAR better than ASP; it's truly not even close.
If in the future Corel somehow releases ASP4, I'll be happy for the company and for the people whose needs it meets, but I won't buy it. I'm now a CO convert.
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- Posts: 36
- Joined: Tue Sep 17, 2013 12:42 pm
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- Video Card: AMD Radeon 7 200
- Hard_Drive_Capacity: 5 tb
- Monitor/Display Make & Model: LG S-IPS
- Corel programs: None - I'm fussy.
Re: How good is AfterShot Pro 3 compared to other RAW editors such as Capture One?
It is - without a shadow of a doubt - by far the worst commercially-available converter on the market, by a huge margin.jungleexplorer wrote: ↑Fri Dec 04, 2020 7:28 pmSo I take it you are not too impressed with AfterShot.![]()
And I speak as someone who was using and supporting it way back from its original incarnation, Bibble.
Bibble was far from perfect - its highlight recovery capabilities stunk, for example - and many (if not most) of the bugs and other image quality failings that we users brought to the attention of the Bibble developers still exist in AfterShot to this very day.
I'm not just "not impressed" by AfterShot, I'm disgusted by it, and by Corel's continuing marketing of it as a viable solution.
It's truly abysmal, even judged in isolation. But compared with other software (I'm very familiar with Capture One; I used to be an official beta tester for what was then DxO Optics; and I was on the Adobe Certified Professional (LightRoom) program - I know my stuff) it's a disgrace that Corel has the nerve to charge money for it.