Buttons for turning on Screen Sharpening, Focus Peaking, Shadow Boost and Highlight Inspection.Buttons for switching between RAW-JPEG-external JPEG.
#Fastrawviewer icons full
Menu – View – Close single image (or Esc Esc/close single image also exits full screen mode).Menu – View – Switch to image Grid (or press G).The program will switch to a Single-File View mode (Single File view): Navigation by using the “arrowkeys” in the main window or the bottom “ Filmstrip” bar and pressing Enter.Menu – View – Switch to single image (G key by default).If FastRawViewer is launched over a specific file (for example, by dropping a RAW file onto the program’s icon, or by double-clicking a file which is associated with FastRawViewer), or by selecting one of the files from the “Grid” by: If FastRawViewer is launched without indicating a filename, if will start in Grid mode, displaying the content of a selected folder: Main Screen View modes: “Grid” and single-file Or drag a folder (catalogue) onto the icon - the program will start and will open the first RAW file in the folder.Īfter start-up you will be presented with the program’s main screen.Or drag any RAW or JPEG file onto the icon, then the program will open and display that file.Start it up the usual way (Double-click the icon).? I’ll be testing it out though, and see if it’s worth the $15 to have something that really shows what I need to see, and at a speed that is acceptable.
#Fastrawviewer icons free
So now I’m back to looking at FastRawViewer again! The free Beta testing period is over, so I’ll have to pay $14.99 to use for longer than 30 days. Now, I can set it to preview the actual RAW data, but that slows it down so much (3-8 seconds between photos) that it’s actually faster to use Lightroom! But, unfortunately, it views the jpeg preview, which is so highly compressed that it is almost worthless for judging critical sharpness at 100% zoom. Now this would not be a problem if FastStone read the data from the RAW file. DNG files are already so large, (20-30 MB each) that they implement some extremely high jpeg compression for the built in previews. Lightroom seems to have a bit of an issue with Pentax’s.
However, I have a problem with it now… I upgraded from my Canon Rebel T3, to a Pentax K-5 DSLR, which shoots RAW files in either. I guess it’s been about exactly a year since the last post on this thread! I’ve used Fast Stone Image Viewer for probably 95% of all my photo viewing, and I’m still happy with it!