Overall, I am more impressed than I was expecting to be with these styles. I don’t really have any portrait shots of my own, but I will try and get some so I can share how these styles look on portrait and lifestyle shoots. I was trying the styles on some sample images from DpReview and they work well on portrait shots, but I can’t share them as they are copyright. The one area that I can’t share, and which is why I’m labelling this as a “first impressions” review is for portraits. This was using the “Copenhagen” style from the editorial pack. The very first image I tried these on, I was quite taken aback by how good it looked. To be honest, I was a little skeptical of these before starting, but I was pleasantly surprised. To try these out I went back into my archives and found some RAW files from when I visited Oslo back in 2012. The second kit, called “Nordic Editorial” also comes in two styles “Oslo and Copenhagen”. There are two packs in the Nordic Styles … styles? The first is the “Nordic Lifestyle” which consists of two styles in 3 variations. Available in two packs, each with two styles in two variations, the stated aim of the styles is to “channel nordic light and beauty” and to “achieve elegant colour grading inspired by Scandinavian editorials.” I had a chance to try out both style packs, and in this post, is my first impressions. A few weeks ago Capture One launched a new style pack for the software of the same name, called “Nordic Styles”.
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