Ipad Pro Capture One



Do you use your iPhone with Capture One Pro? Is a smartphone a camera to take serious? If so, how can you incorporate it in your Capture One workflow? With this post I share how I went ahead since I recently bought a new iPhone.

Use Your iPhone with Capture One Pro

As a long time DSLR shooter with Capture One Pro, I hardly used my iPhone 6 for my kind of imagery. That changed the moment I bought the iPhone 7 Plus with iOS 10. That combination offered me the following advantages.

With Apple's announcement today to put the M1 Chip into the iPad Pro, it seems that having a Capture One workflow on the iPad is closer than ever and pretty much inevitable. My fingers are crossed that full native support for the M1 Chip comes soon!

  • Dual lens setup
    enhances the phone’s versatility considerably, only on iPhone 7 Plus
  • Improved image quality
    due to a wider color gamut of sensor and display; better signal processing, optics, and sensor
  • DNG RAW support
    thanks to iOS 10 and 3rd party camera apps

Also, note that an advantage of a smartphone as a camera is that I carry it almost always with me. And although I still love to shoot with my DSLR I also love to explore new opportunities.

  1. You can create a screen recording and capture sound on your iPad. Go to Settings Control Center, then tap next to Screen Recording. Open Control Center, tap, then wait for the three-second countdown. To stop recording, open Control Center, tap or the red status bar at the top of the screen, then tap Stop.
  2. Capture One Pro (11.1 or later) with supported camera tethered connection is required when pairing the camera control app with a Sony camera. Capture Pilot can connect directly over Wi-Fi to a Phase One IQ2 or IQ3 Digital back.

Next (R)evolution

Just like about 15 years ago, when half of the crowd started to use digital cameras while the other half said it was not good enough, we now see smartphones take over from conventional digital cameras. And again, it starts with killing the lower end Point-And-Shoot cameras, working its way up to the bigger stuff.

In the meantime, we have become common to the internet and social media, which helped to unlock the smartphone’s potential as imaging device. Last but not least, smartphone builders are aggressively upgrading the cameras to sell their newest stuff to us.

Pro

The iPhone 7 Plus perfectly fits in this description and I am ready to figure out how to incorporate the smartphone in my workflow.

JPEG or RAW?

The latest iPhone models combined with iOS 10 offer both options, JPEG and RAW. My overall workflow is a bit different whether I shoot JPEG or RAW or both with the iPhone. It mainly is related to the camera app I use.

Capture

JPEG

The JPEG image quality out of the iPhone 7 series is incredibly good and has baffled me from the first shot. Dynamic range is obviously the weakest point here, so pay attention.

That said, one particularly nice feature of the iPhone 7 Plus is the Depth Effect of the Portrait mode of the iOS10 Camera app. See the example above in a before/after comparison, where the Depth Effect is apparent in the after image.

Note: these are JPEG files direct from the iPhone, except for some cropping and curve in Capture One. No blur filter is applied in post-processing.

Unfortunately, this app can only shoot JPEG, and the Depth Effect is a feature exclusive to this app.

RAW

Only the most recent iPhone SE/6s/7 and iPad Pro (9.7″) from 2016 with a 12-megapixel camera and running iOS 10 are able to shoot to RAW DNG. Older hardware or iOS versions do not support this feature nor does the built-in Camera app.

Fortunately, all good 3rd party camera apps for iOS now support RAW.

I selected an alternative camera app to shoot JPEG + DNG RAW. The image above shows the in-camera JPEG (left) and the DNG RAW image processed in Capture One (right). I adjusted the RAW image to make it look similar to the JPEG. This allows you to see the color rendition and tonality between the two.

All camera apps save the RAW image in a native DNG format. Most of them save a JPEG file along with the RAW file, so you shoot JPEG + RAW.

Capture One Workflow

Depending on whether I shoot JPEG or RAW, I slightly adapt my workflow while copying the images from the iPhone to my computer.

Since there is no memory card to pull from my iPhone and plug it into my computer, I have to find another way of transporting my images to my computer with Capture One Pro.

No Card? Use Cord!

Capture One Pro Free

I connect the iPhone with the Lightning-USB cable to my computer. This is very untypical for the seasoned Capture One user, since connecting a camera means tethering!

As a Mac user, I now rely on the basic and brutal tool that comes with macOS: the program Image Capture. As soon I connect my iPhone with the USB cable it shows me the images and I can sort on Name, Date or Kind of image to easily select what I need and copy it.

When I copy the images I optionally select Delete after import to remove the original from my iPhone. Some may find this a risky choice, and in fact, it is. Since I often shoot JPEG + RAW, I only download the RAWs and leave the JPEGs to be synced through iCloud.

Sometimes I like to JPEG images so much that I copy them too as a reference when I work on the DNG RAW images in Capture One Pro.

As a bonus, I made Image Capture start automatically when I connect my iPhone but I do not recommend this if you frequently connect your iPhone to your system for other purposes like battery charging, internet access through your phone’s mobile network, or synchronize the iPhone with iTunes.

Capture One JPEG Workflow

Actually nothing new here compared to any other JPEG workflow. Capture One Pro 10 derives the color profile (Display P3 in the iPhone 7, almost similar to AdobeRGB) and allows for many editing capabilities.

Capture

Note that in Capture One DB mode JPEG (and TIFF) editing is not supported but viewing is.

Capture One DNG RAW Workflow

Since there is currently no native support for the iPhone (or any smartphone’s) DNG RAW files in Capture One Pro, the program will open them with the generic DNG File Neutral camera profile. On opening these RAW files two things are obvious at first glance:

  1. you need to do quite some editing to get a reasonable result
  2. compared to iPhone’s JPEGs the color rendering of the RAW files is much better

Point 2 drives my internal motivation to keep using Capture One both for the iPhone as in general and you sure need it to mitigate point 1. To help you in the process, I made a set of Capture One iPhone Styles.

Capture One iPhone Styles

Capture

The Capture One iPhone Styles apply the following corrections: High Contrast Film Curve, Exposure, High Dynamic Range, Luma Curve, Clarity, and Lens Correction Light Falloff. They are actually all identical except for the Exposure adjustment, which is often needed but to a varying degree.

I use it as a starting point for further corrections. Note that you can apply a Style (or Preset) or a combination of them during capturing and import.

You can find these Capture One iPhone Styles in my webshop and you can download them for free.

Session or Catalog

With the image files on your computer you can:

  • open the folder in a Session, browsing System Folders
  • move them into a Session Folder from the Capture One Library tool
  • import them into a Session or Catalog with the Import Images tool

Which option works best depends on your current workflow, and whether you use Sessions or Catalogs. To refresh your memory on the topic of importing, please refer to Catalogs Continued.

The Camera App

The combination of iOS 10 and the 12-megapixel camera sensors in the latest model iPhone and iPad Pro provide the opportunity of shooting DNG RAW. However, the native Camera app does save your images in RAW. Several 3rd party camera apps now support shooting DNG RAW.

Adobe is repeatedly seeking publicity with their Lightroom for iOS app but for advanced camera handling I prefer:

  • ProCamera by Cocologics
    only RAW on iPhone, not on iPad Pro
  • ProCam 4 by Samer Azzam
    RAW on both iPhone and iPad Pro

Note that Camera+ (by tap tap tap) is also a worthy contender and known for being a frontrunner in this class. Personally I find that it is outperformed by the two apps mentioned above. I plan to discuss these apps in more detail in a different post.

Wishlist

To improve on the iPhone with Capture One workflow, I have been in contact with Phase One and dropped a feature request for full file and lens camera support.

In addition, import capabilities would also be welcome, with or without an app on the iPhone.

Time will tell what will come of this. In the meantime, you have a workaround as described or maybe you come up with something else.

Thank you

For reading. Please feel free to leave a comment. Like us on Facebook or subscribe to our newsletter to stay informed about new blogs.

Want to try Capture One? Or would you like to buy it?

Ipad Pro Capture One Software

Best Regards,

Image Alchemist

How to record your screen

  1. With iOS 14 or later, go to Settings > Control Center and tap More Controls (or tap Customize Controls if you have iOS 13 or earlier), then tap the Add button next to Screen Recording.
  2. Open Control Center on your iPhone or iPod touch, or on your iPad.
  3. Touch and hold the gray Record button , then tap Microphone.
  4. Tap Start Recording, then wait for the three-second countdown.
  5. Open Control Center on your iPhone or iPod touch, or on your iPad, then tap the red Record button . Or tap the red status bar at the top of your screen and tap Stop.

Go to the Photos app and select your screen recording.

Some apps might not allow you to record audio. You can't record your screen and use screen mirroring at the same time.

Learn more

Capture One Ipad App

Learn how to take a screenshot on your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.





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