On Oct 22, 2006, at 12:08 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>> Use Camera Raw's white-balance eye dropper. Look for what ought to be
>> a Zone VIII to Zone IX gray tone (values with close to proper
>> exposure setting should be between 180 and 230 in R, G and B) and
>> click on it ... I find this gets
Use Camera Raw's white-balance eye dropper. Look for what ought to be
a Zone VIII to Zone IX gray tone (values with close to proper
exposure setting should be between 180 and 230 in R, G and B) and
click on it ... I find this gets me very very close to the mark most
of the time.
Godfrey
O
In a message dated 10/22/2006 11:54:31 AM Pacific Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Use Camera Raw's white-balance eye dropper. Look for what ought to be
a Zone VIII to Zone IX gray tone (values with close to proper
exposure setting should be between 180 and 230 in R, G and B) and
cli
I think this is a deficiency with Camera Raw more than anything else.
I do the same thing (using Photoshop CS2 + Camera Raw), although I
find that usually exposure needs to be set at around +0.3-0.5 as a
baseline for white point, using the DS body.
Godfrey
On Oct 22, 2006, at 8:29 AM, Bill
On 10/22/06, Bill Owens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Regardless of the camera WB setting, the Adobe RAW converter shows the WB
> "as shot", and a color temperature of 4800. I find that changing the white
> balance to whatever the actual conditions were, and setting exposure to 0.00
> usually shows
Regardless of the camera WB setting, the Adobe RAW converter shows the WB
"as shot", and a color temperature of 4800. I find that changing the white
balance to whatever the actual conditions were, and setting exposure to 0.00
usually shows the image as I remember it being.
Bill
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