Besides the default curve, I would also apply any desired white balance,
denoise, and lens correction (or chromatic aberrations module) to the RAW files
before exporting, since those work better on linear data, I believe.
--
jys
On Wed, Aug 17, 2016, at 19:20, I. Ivanov wrote:
> Hi All,
>
>
Hi All,
What works better for you?
1. Correct a set of 3 images and then HDR using Luminance or
2. Process the 3 images only with the default curve and then use
Luminance then bring them back in DT for further corrections?
Regards,
B
You will have to install the Canon software on windows (or perhaps
extract from the zip files) and look for the following.
FA.ICC FS.ICC LA.ICC LS.ICC NA.ICC NS.ICC PA.ICC PS.ICC SA.ICC
SS.ICC
FA is (Faithful AdobeRGB) and FS is (Faithful SRGB) etc. These can be
copied
The following links give some insight into how a lighting-independent (within
reason) color profile is prepared:
http://ninedegreesbelow.com/photography/camera-profile-make-target-shot.html
http://ninedegreesbelow.com/photography/well-behaved-camera-profile.html
--
jys
On Wed, Aug 17,
Hi,
I was just wondering how an input profile for a
camera works in darktable.
If I understood right, an ICC profile also
includes the white point, but the lighting
conditions can yield a different white point,
and darktable allows me to change that. Does
this mean, I would need a different
Hi Leander,
I am also experiencing disappointing performance in darktable on a new
Macbook Pro. Same model as yours I believe:
Mid 2015, 2.5 GHz Intel i7
16 GB Ram
Intel Iris Pro
AMD Radeon R9 M370X - 2 GB Ram
When you enable OpenCL, and open an image in the darkroom module,
doesn't it turn