In Digital Photo Software
In Mac
- Browsers
- Business Software
- Communications
- Desktop Enhancements
- Developer Tools
- Digital Photo Software
- Drivers
- Educational Software
- Graphic Design Software
- Home Software
- Internet Software
- iTunes & iPod Software
- Mac Games
- MP3 & Audio Software
- Networking Software
- Productivity Software
- Screensavers & Wallpaper
- Security Software
- Travel
- Utilities & Operating Systems
- Video Software
More From CNET UK
ProEXR 1.3
fnord
ProEXR is a set of 6 plug-ins to provide complete support for the OpenEXR file format in Adobe Photoshop and After Effects. Both Adobe applications include basic support for OpenEXR, but ProEXR provides access to important features of the format including multiple image layers, preservation of color space information, and choice between all compression options available in the latest OpenEXR libraries. The ProEXR Photoshop plug-in sells for $95 while the After Effects plug-ins are free and open source.
With ProEXR, artists working in Photoshop CS3 Extended can work with layered EXR files and save projects as EXR without collapsing layers. This one file can then be opened in digital compositing applications such as After Effects, Shake, Nuke, and Fusion. In many cases, OpenEXR is the only layered format the application supports.
In After Effects, the 5 free plug-ins included with ProEXR take care of everything from OpenEXR file I/O, to extraction of channels into a composition, to automated project set-up from a layered file. They are open source to ensure that production facilities have unlimited ability to integrate After Effects with their OpenEXR-based pipelines.
Built with the latest libraries from ILM, it lets artists read and write all OpenEXR compression formats, including the new B44 method which uses high-quality lossy compression to crush 32-bit float images to a fraction of their uncompressed size.
CNET Networks is not responsible for the content of this Publisher's Description.
Most Popular Image Editing Software Downloads

- Twitter denies Japan plan to pay you 70 per cent for tweeting
- Google and Bing top searches of 2009: Swine flu, Facebook and the king of pop
- Gimmicks are the new megapixels: The new generation of unusual digital cameras
- Microsoft reportedly at loggerheads with BBC over iPlayer on Xbox Live
- BBC scotches new iPlayer iPhone app rumour
- Asus K70: Basic big bargain

Follow CNET UK on Twitter
Get all our reviews, videos and blog posts delivered direct to your Twitter feed as they are published

Listen to the CNET UK podcast
The team chat about hot gadgets and Web weirdness





