![]() ![]() If you have previously saved DNG files with the original raw file embedded, you can extract the original raw file, but you will need the Adobe DNG converter to do that I believe. That blue selection box at the bottom is now your only safety net for getting your original files back at this point Tom. This is what the box looks like in the Adobe DNG converter: This is the only way I suggest anyone ever use DNG, by also imbedding the original files. If you checked this box, your ARW files can be extracted and so recovered from inside the Adobe DNG files. Your only hope is if you selected in the preferences to imbed the original ARW file into the DNG when Lightroom did your import. This sounds like what has happened to you, so I am making my first assumption that you have elected to delete your original AWR files on import and DNG conversion. You have the option of deleting or preserving the originals on disk after the conversion, but unless you have specifically selected to save the originals, Lightroom will delete them. When photos are converted to DNG with Lightroom, the DNG files replace the original ARW files in the catalog. There are reasons why no other raw converters use the Adobe license for the DNG technology that relate to the specific Adobe license terms, but the only thing that matters to you right now is nobody does. In other words, your original Sony proprietary ARW raw files have now been converted to Adobe proprietary raw files, which no RAW converter I know of except those made by Adobe will read. I am going to make a few assumptions here, so I apologize if I don't guess your particular situation correctly the first time.ĭNG is basically only supported to read those converted files using Photoshop or Lightroom. Click to expand.Tom, there is your problem I believe. ![]()
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