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  • Going off what @miro_o is saying, it looks as if the image dimensions are incorrect. I did a uni project last year where I was researching tiff formats. From what I understood, pixel data in digital files are saved in a string of data, so when the computer draws it out, it does it row by row according to the dimension of the image. If the dimension data is changed compared to the pixel data, all the pixels end up skewed. From the looks of your image, the width of the dimensions have been increased and so there are more pixels per row then there should be. Which is why there is the black bar at the bottom where there is no pixel data at all.

    When you open the raw files in photoshop, does it ask you to specify dimensions?

  • When you open the raw files in photoshop, does it ask you to specify dimensions?

    Yes

  • I think if you were to put in the original dimensions of the image you'd get something resembling the original image. If you don't know it, you could probably get it by trial and error, just keep decreasing the width until everything ends up in the correct place

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