Workaround: Extending XnView's capabilities by installing B/W Conversion by George Fournaris of photo-plugins.com
Total control over the tonal response of Red, Yellow, Green, Cyan, Blue and Magenta, and the intermediate hues.
The user can boost each color's tonal response all the way up to white or limit it down to black, without affecting the other colors at all .
The plugin offers presets that accurately simulate the tonal response of the most popular b/w films.
The plugin can introduce a grain effect of controllable intensity and density.
An option to simulate the effect of color lens filters, with selectable hue and saturation is also available.
The user can also apply a toing effect of selectable color and intensity.
A brightness meter is displayed when the cursor is over the preview window
All settings can be saved in a parameter file to be available for future use.
Start XnViewMP and go to Image → Adobe Photoshop Plugin… → Configure… to tell XnView where to look for Photoshop-compatible plug-ins (including ppc2bw.8bf).
Usil wrote: Wed Dec 18, 2019 7:55 am
I have also tried putting it into my Photoshop plugins folder but Photoshop tells me that it is unavailable on my system.
Do you know if this plugin needs to be able to run in Photoshop to work? It might be that my Photoshop version is too new?
I'm using the latest version of Photoshop (Adobe Photoshop Version: 21.0.2 20191122.r.57 2019/11/22: e3e4068e635 x64)
No need for Photoshop...
Many thanks for the tip for installing that plugin but unfortunately, it does not show up in XnView.
I have copied it to a folder on the root of my C: drive but it does not show up in XnView.
You have followed XnTriq's instructions above to install in XnView MP, not tried to install in XnConvert?
I only installed a Photoshop plug-in once, and several years ago, but I recall I found the process confusing, so it might be worth experimenting a bit more.
I think, from memory, that at the 'Configure' stage you need to browse to the folder containing the plug-in and select the plug-in...
Edit: I'm not sure whether you select the folder, or the plug-in (or plug-ins) in it, whichever they should then show in the XnView MP 8BF filters list.
I can't check on my Linux laptop, apart from the time factor.
cday wrote: Wed Dec 18, 2019 9:27 am
I think, from memory, that at the 'Configure' stage you need to browse to the folder containing the plug-in and select the plug-in...
Edit: I'm not sure whether you select the folder, or the plug-in (or plug-ins) in it, whichever they should then show in the XnView MP 8BF filters list.
I can't check on my Linux laptop, apart from the time factor.
Thanks for the help. You just need to point it to the folder where the plugins are installed and it should see any compatible plugins. This is what I have done but it's not seeing the plugin.