This update is all about workflow efficiency and core processing quality. I’ve implemented Automatic Negative Conversion and HDR Merge to speed up your initial processing steps. On the editing side, the tonal adjustment engine has been overhauled to respect image detail, preventing the "muddy" look that can happen when pushing shadows too far. There are also new AI organizational tools, full XMP metadata syncing, and a long list of stability fixes.
I’ve added a new productivity tool to accurately invert film scans with a single click. This feature automatically analyzes the film base and inverts the colors to a positive image. This implementation wouldn't be possible without @marcinz606's NegPy.
You can now merge multiple exposures into a single High Dynamic Range image directly within the app. This allows you to combine bracketed shots to recover highlights and shadows that a single RAW file couldn't capture.
Here is an exposure bracket of 3 images: The result is a image file containing the full dynamic range of all 3 images, ready for editing: I have significantly improved how basic tonal adjustments (like Shadows/Highlights) interact with image textures.
Previously, these adjustments didn't distinguish well between large tonal areas and fine local contrast, which could lead to flat or "washed out" textures when recovering shadows. I’ve now implemented tonal detail masks into the pipeline. The engine now accurately targets luminance levels while protecting local contrast and fine details.
You can now define your own list of keywords, and the AI will analyze your photos and apply the most relevant tags automatically. This is great for culling large shoots. For example, if you input "day, night, indoor," the AI will sort your library accordingly, allowing you to filter by specific scenes instantly. The app now supports full XMP sidecar synchronization. This means you can read and write metadata (Ratings, Color Labels, and Tags) seamlessly, ensuring compatibility with other photo editors and asset managers. This behavior can be toggled in the settings. Right-clicking the Undo or Redo button now reveals a dropdown list of your edit history, making it easier to jump back to a specific point in your editing process without mashing I've added several new composition overlays to the crop tool. You can now cycle through various guides (Golden Ratio, Diagonals, etc.) to help nail the framing.New Features
Automatic Negative Conversion
Film Scan
Automatically Converted
HDR Merge
Detail-Aware Tonal Adjustments
Original
v1.4.12 (Basic)
v1.5.0 (Detail-Aware)
Custom AI Tagging
XMP Metadata Read/Sync
Dropdown History
Ctrl+Z.
New Composition Guide Overlays
Core Improvements
Shift + Click.
What to Download
| OS | Architecture | Format | Download Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Windows | x64 | .exe
| RapidRAW for Windows |
| macOS (Apple Silicon) | ARM64 | .dmg
| RapidRAW for macOS ARM |
| macOS (Intel) | x64 | .dmg
| RapidRAW for macOS x64 |
| Ubuntu 22.04 | x86_64 | .deb
| RapidRAW for Ubuntu 22.04 |
| Ubuntu 24.04 | x86_64 | .deb
| RapidRAW for Ubuntu 24.04 |
For other platforms and formats (ARM builds, RPM, AppImage, etc.), check the full asset list below.
Running on Windows, macOS and Linux
Because RapidRAW is not yet code-signed, both macOS and Windows may show warnings when you try to run the app.
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On Windows:
When launching the app, you may see a Windows Defender SmartScreen warning.- Click "More info" → "Run anyway" to continue.
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On macOS:
You’ll need to remove the quarantine flag after installation:xattr -dr com.apple.quarantine /Applications/RapidRAW.app
Without this step, macOS may report the app as "corrupted."
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On Linux:
Because GPU drivers vary across distributions, the app starts in compatibility mode by default to ensure stability and prevent crashes.- To enable full GPU acceleration (recommended for better performance), disable compatibility mode in Settings.