However, It appears that DxO’s versions may have additional options selected so they may not be as “partial” as the ones I uploaded. ![]() The Nik Collection is essentially a large collection of presets and filters that can be modified, while FilmPack 6 adds a number of other useful features directly to PhotoLab 5 besides the 97 filmtypes in it.ADDENDUM: Please note that on January 4th, it came to my attention that DXO added partial presets for the seven new Fuji Digital films, the six new Cinematic films and Kodak EIR to the DXO Filmpack Designer - Color folder. In my opinion, there is no overlap between FilmPack and the Nik Collection. Essential also does not support configuring the interface and limits the number of computers on which it can be installed. The Essential version does not have a preset editor or support the creation of partial presets. The Essential version does not support the ClearView Plus Haze filter or PRIME and DeepPRIME noise reduction. The difference between the Elite and Essential versions of PhotoLab is about other features. FIlmPack and Viewpoint features are already embedded in PL5 but require a paid license for them to unhide these features. PhotoLab Elite does not include FilmPack or Viewpoint. It would be time to reorganize those parallel offers and de-deduplicate similars preset between the standard PhotoLab film presets, the FilmPack option presets and the Analog Color and B&W film presets from the Nik Collection. I always understood that Elite vs Essential was about FilmPack + ViewPoint included for the PL Elite version.Ībout FilmPack Elite vs Nik Collection, are we paying twice the same analog film presets ? ![]() Why is there in my personal DXO manager an option to upgrade to PL4 Elite → PL5 Elite and FP6 Elite alone ? I still don’t understand if my PL4 elite upgrade will include FP6 elite ?
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