Chris,
Yes, the most frustrating aspect of this is that some of those embedded
jpegs have more colour and tone subtlety than I can get darktable to
generate. I just wanted to add more contrast to one. I'll take a look at
exiv2, thanks for the tip.
-J
John P Santos
Digital Media Consultant
*Green Bee Media*
greenbeemedia.com
facebook.com/greenbeemedia.ca
twitter.com/greenbeemedia
On Thu, Jul 18, 2013 at 2:01 PM, Chris Siebenmann <[email protected]>wrote:
> | That is actually what I plan to do for the next shoot, so we can
> | get a side by side comparison. Unfortunately the shoot had taken
> | place several weeks before I had time to work on the selection and
> | development of them and the materials were no longer available.
>
> It may be worth mentioning: basically all RAW files contain an embedded
> camera JPEG (usually in basic quality). If you have RAW files from
> a shoot where DT didn't render the colour right but the in-camera
> processing did, you could extract those JPEGs for a direct comparison
> and so on (exiv2 will do this, among other tools).
>
> - cks
>
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