Capture One Process



The keyboard shortcuts or hotkeys in Capture One provide a great way of increasing the speed with which you can edit your photos. Once you have mastered the basic keyboard shortcuts, you can quickly switch between any of Capture One’s tools to apply the settings of your choice to your photos and perform any preset action on your image.

The next step is to close Capture One and the re-open the software so you can access the new color profile. Look under ICC profile: (other) for the new custom profile you just named. Today I will be discussing how I use both Capture One Pro and Affinity Photo to produce the work that you see on my website, and will take you behind the scenes a little bit to show you my process while editing an image I photographed at the Egg Harbor Library shoot featured in the video linked here: Egg Harbor Library.

Capture One’s hotkeys are regularly used by professional photographers who need the ability to process large volumes of photographs on a regular basis.
The main purposes of the hotkeys are to allow you to quickly and easily make as many edits as possible without having to select menus and options with your mouse.

We have created a big list of all the main Capture One hotkeys that are available for use in processing.

Keyboard Shortcuts Editor

First, open the hotkey editor in Capture One, which you can find at Capture One –> Edit Keyboard Shortcuts.

Here you will find a complete list of all the tools that you can assign to keyboard shortcuts in Capture One.

By default, hotkeys for the basic functions of Capture One have already been assigned, but you can also allocate your own keyboard shortcuts for any additional tools or modify an existing hotkeys if you wish.

The personal hotkeys setup can be saved and transferred to any other computer.

Configuration files for Capture One keyboard shortcuts are stored in the following location: User> Library> Application Support> Capture One> KeyboardShortcuts on Mac OS and a similar system folder in Windows.
On many operating systems these folders are hidden by default, so to work with them you must first ensure that they are marked as visible.

Main Keyboard Shortcuts

We have collected the major keyboard shortcuts that are most commonly used the work and will save you the most time during processing.
Hotkeys for mac / windows are provided for each function.

1) Switching between tabs with processing tools

Very useful hotkey that allows you to quickly switch to any tab. You can use the tab’s number or just open the next or previous tab.

Open tab by number:
Alt⌥ + Cmd⌘ + 1,2,3… / Ctrl + 1,2,3…

Previous / next tab:
Alt⌥ + Cmd⌘ + ←/→ / Ctrl + Tab, previous Ctrl + Shift + Tab

2) Process photos

⌘ + D / Ctrl + D

3) Delete files

In Capture One you can move files in the session/catalog trash or directly delete it permanently.

Move to trash:
⌘ + ⌫ / Ctrl + Del or simply Del

Delete permanently
Ctrl⌃ + ⌘ + ⌫ / Alt + Del

4) Ratings and colored tags

Any file can be assigned a rating from 1 to 5 stars in figures 1-5, and colored tags can also exhibit keyboard bindings: + for green, for red and * for yellow tag.

5) Select all photos

⌘ + A / Ctrl + A

5) Undo/Redo

Undo:
⌘ + Z / Ctrl + Z

Redo:
Shift⇧ + ⌘ + Z / Ctrl + Y or Ctrl + Shift + Z

6) Compare Variant

Capture One contains a great feature that allows users to compare images: “Compare Variant.” We wrote about this in a previous article.
There is, of course, also a hotkey for this action.

Assign Compare Variant:
Enter

ProcessCapture

Clear Compare Variant:
⌘ + Enter / Shift + Enter

Capture one batch processing

7) Zoom

Zoom In:
⌘+ / Ctrl+

Zoom Out:
⌘- / Ctrl-

To Fit:
⌘0 / Ctrl0

100%:
⌥ + ⌘ + 0 / Ctrl + Alt + 0

8) New Variant / Clone Variant

New VariantF2 / F7

Clone VariantF3 / F8

Photo Editing Keyboard Shortcuts

1) Top Tools menu

Select — V
Pan — H
Loupe — P
Crop — C
Rotate — R
Keystone — K
Remove Spot — O
Copy/Apply Adjustments — A

Local Adjustments tool also have several important hotkeys:

Using these, you can quickly switch between the “brush,” “eraser” or “gradient” tools to create a layer mask and the M hotkey allows you to switch between the mask display.

By the way, hotkeys can also be used to change the size and hardness of the Local Adjustments “brush” tool.

Size:
Increase size — ]Reduce size — [

Hardness:
Enlarge⇧ + ] / Shift + ]Reduce⇧ +[ / Shift + [

The pick tool also has a lot of useful keyboard shortcuts:

You can adjust all the exposure settings using hotkeys:

Irreplaceable for fast processing is the hotkeys for copying / applying settings from one file to another:

Copy processing settings:
⇧ + ⌘ + С / Ctrl + Shift + C

Apply processing settings:
⇧ + ⌘ + V / Ctrl + Shift + V

This is just a small part of the keyboard shortcuts that can be created and used in Capture One. Once you start using them on a regular basis, you will soon notice how much faster you can edit your photos.

If you’re new to Capture One, here are five things which I recommend you to do:

1) Download the Free Guide to Capture One

“Mastering Capture One” is a free guide to learn Capture One and a collection of more than 110 links to the best articles and videos to study each topic.
The first part – “Essential Training” will give you everything you need to begin working in Capture One without a mass of overwhelming information.

You can read it online or download it as PDF right here:

2) Subscribe to my Newsletter

Each issue of the newsletter contains:

  • Latest news from Capture One community
  • Reading of the week
  • Capture One tip of the week
  • A free RAW file for practice

It’s absolutely free, and I promise not to send emails more often than once a week!

3) Download 12 film styles for Capture One for free

In my work, I use 1Styles.pro Film Styles. There are more than 200 styles which you can quickly scroll through and immediately see which would fit your image best.

You can download five film styles for free right here:

You’ll find seven additional free styles at this link.
Simply try them with your images – it’s a completely new experience for RAW editing.

4) Subscribe to my YouTube channel

Capture One Process All Variants

Each week I’m running Capture One Live Show where we’re discussing the latest Capture One news, and I’m showing my favorite tips for RAW editing.
And the best thing is that you can watch it live and ask questions!

Plus: you can upload your RAW files to see how I would edit them in one of the next episodes of the show.

5) Join our Facebook group or follow me on Twitter


Here I’m sharing the most interesting articles and videos about Capture One which I found recently.

Recently Rocky Nook published a new book “Capture One Pro 9: Mastering Raw Development, Image Processing, and Asset Management” written by Sascha Erni.
It’s a well structured, well illustrated and well explained guide to learn how Capture One works.

With Rocky Nook’s permission, we will publish four parts of the book.

Today we’re publishing the fourth article – “Understanding the Capture One Sharpening Tool. Finding the Right Sharpening Settings”.

The Sharpening tool has Amount, Radius, and Threshold sliders. The Amount setting determines how strongly the tool sharpens. The Radius setting determines the number of pixels. The Amount range of 0–1000 ensures finely differentiated settings.

The Threshold value is a little trickier to come to grips with. Put simply, it defines how little contrast there has to be between image areas before the sharpening effect kicks in. Low values equate to low contrast (that is, more image areas), whereas higher values equate to more contrast (that is, fewer, more precisely defined areas such as edges or backlit mesh patterns). The defaults are “fine weather” settings designed to counteract only a little of the unsharpness caused by demosaicing.

The Threshold setting determines which areas of an image are affected.

In a shake-free image captured at the camera’s lowest standard ISO setting, Capture One will only sharpen gently where ultra-fine contrast exists—that is, where fine details have been lost due to demosaicing. The default settings leave everything else as it is.

These two images, captured using a Leica M9, show the result of applying no input sharpening (left) and input sharpening using Capture One’s default settings (right).

As an example, let’s take a look at the Soft Image Sharpening 3 preset, which is designed to rescue details that have turned out too soft.
The preset has an Amount setting of 300 (about 30%) for everything above the Threshold value of 0.5—in other words, nearly every pixel. The Radius setting of 2.0 ensures that the effect is generously applied.

From left to right: The results of applying no sharpening, applying the default input sharpening settings, and applying the Soft Image Sharpening 3 preset

The aim of input sharpening is to make softer image areas crisper without creating too many additional artifacts in high-contrast areas.
The overarching aim at this stage is to counterbalance the technical shortcomings of the image capture process and to prepare the image for further processing, not to apply sharpening fit for online or print output.

You can, of course, use the Sharpening tool to perform general sharpening. However, because optimum sharpness depends on the size of the final image, you’ll still have to experiment to find the best settings.
Additionally, because appropriate sharpening settings vary from image to image, output sharpening in Capture One can quickly become quite complex and you can easily find yourself adjusting and outputting even small numbers of images multiple times until they all look sharp enough but not oversharpened.
I recommend that you perform only input sharpening in Capture One and leave output sharpening for small images destined for online publication to an image-processing program like PhotoLine or a dedicated sharpening program like Nik Dfine.

Learning to find the right compromise between “sharp enough” and “oversharpened” takes practice.
If you’re preparing small images for online publication, you can simply ignore the Sharpening tool or leave the default settings in place.

The presets provided cover most situations, although they are quite general and are designed specifically for use with Phase One cameras.
The following steps explain how to find and save the right settings for your particular camera:

1. Open a shake-free image with a low or medium ISO setting, neutral exposure, a well-defined focal plane, and no creative light and shade effects.

2. Switch to the 100% view and set all three Sharpening sliders to 0. Use the Navigator to find where the image is sharpest.

3. Drag the Amount slider all the way to the right.

4. Increase the Radius setting until the fine details lost during demosaicing are once again well defined.
To increase the Radius setting by increments of 0.1, click in the value box and use the up / down arrow keys.

5. Once you’ve found the right Radius setting, switch to a dark area.
This doesn’t have to be on the focal plane, since the next step is about noise rather than sharpness.

6. In step 4 you increased the level of visible sensor noise. Let’s now reduce this effect using the Threshold setting.

7. Click in the Threshold value box, and once again, use the arrow keys to find the optimum value.

8. Switch to the Amount setting, starting with a value of 100.

9. Use the Navigator to shift the zoomed detail back to the focal plane and start to increase the Amount value. To adjust it in increments of 10, click in the value box and use the up / down arrow keys with the Shift key pressed.

Capture

You’ve now found the optimum settings for a “normal” image.
To save these settings for the camera that captured it, open the action menu (the button with three dots in the Sharpening panel) and select “Save as Defaults for….”
To make these settings available generally, open the Manage and Apply menu (the button with three horizontal lines) and select Save User Preset.

Capture Process Steps

To reset the default values, open the action menu and select “Reset Defaults for….”

IMPORTANT
Noise reduction also influences the amount of input sharpening you need to apply.
To find the appropriate values for your camera, set Noise Reduction to its default values (for Capture One 9, this means Luminance 50, Details 50, Color 50, Single Pixel 10).
This ensures that any sharpening presets you create can be more universally applied—when no noise reduction is required, you won’t need to apply as much input sharpening, but you can still use the settings for a variety of source images captured at widely differing ISO levels.

You can purchase the whole book “Capture One Pro 9: Mastering Raw Development, Image Processing, and Asset Management” at Rocky Nook on-line store.

There are also special discounts for all the AlexOnRAW readers:

1. 40% discount for the eBook version of “Capture One Pro 9: Mastering Raw Development, Image Processing, and Asset Management”

How to get the discount?

1) At Rocky Nook on-line store click “Add to cart” to purchase an eBook version of the book.
2) On the Check Out page enter this special coupon code: CAPTUREONE40, select “Apply Coupon” and you will immediately gain a 40% discount.

2. 35% discount for only Print Book or eBook and Print Bundle. Available in March.

How to get the discount?

1) At Rocky Nook on-line store click “Add to cart” to purchase Print Book or Print and eBook Bundle.
2) On the Check Out page enter this special coupon code: C1BLOG, select “Apply Coupon” and you will immediately gain a 35% discount.

If you’re new to Capture One, here are five things which I recommend you to do:

1) Download the Free Guide to Capture One

“Mastering Capture One” is a free guide to learn Capture One and a collection of more than 110 links to the best articles and videos to study each topic.
The first part – “Essential Training” will give you everything you need to begin working in Capture One without a mass of overwhelming information.

You can read it online or download it as PDF right here:

2) Subscribe to my Newsletter

Each issue of the newsletter contains:

  • Latest news from Capture One community
  • Reading of the week
  • Capture One tip of the week
  • A free RAW file for practice

It’s absolutely free, and I promise not to send emails more often than once a week!

3) Download 12 film styles for Capture One for free

In my work, I use 1Styles.pro Film Styles. There are more than 200 styles which you can quickly scroll through and immediately see which would fit your image best.

You can download five film styles for free right here:

You’ll find seven additional free styles at this link.
Simply try them with your images – it’s a completely new experience for RAW editing.

4) Subscribe to my YouTube channel

Each week I’m running Capture One Live Show where we’re discussing the latest Capture One news, and I’m showing my favorite tips for RAW editing.
And the best thing is that you can watch it live and ask questions!

Plus: you can upload your RAW files to see how I would edit them in one of the next episodes of the show.

5) Join our Facebook group or follow me on Twitter


Here I’m sharing the most interesting articles and videos about Capture One which I found recently.