One thing is to shoot the IT8 target right which I think you managed
well. Another thing is how darktable works with the icc profiles. Maybe
I missed it but did you describe how you produce the icc profiles from
the image? Nevertheless I also have difficulties getting the colors
right using icc pro
The only reason I don't already do this is that the memory consumption of
DT seems to skyrocket, as well as the fact that this is not a solution when
it comes to wanting to make adjustments to exposure etc.
John P Santos
Photographer // Owner
GREENBEEMEDIA.COM
On Fri, Feb 7, 2014 at 3:55 PM,
John P Santos píše v So 01. 02. 2014 v 21:14 -0500:
> If I could train my camera to watermark the images as it generates a
> JPG, which is all I need Darktable to do when I deal with the volume
> of photos I end up with at events then I wouldn't worry about this,
IMHO dt can import also JPEGs (an
On 06/02/2014 18:30, Robert William Hutton wrote:
> On 06/02/14 16:50, brami ary wrote:
>> With the help of two other photo-bloggers, I just publish on my blog a
>> développement match between Lightroom and Darktable.
>> It's the tird time that we do this sort of match.
>> I let you decide who did
On 07/02/2014 21:37, Emmanuel Lacour wrote:
> On 06/02/2014 18:30, Robert William Hutton wrote:
>> On 06/02/14 16:50, brami ary wrote:
>>> With the help of two other photo-bloggers, I just publish on my blog a
>>> développement match between Lightroom and Darktable.
>>> It's the tird time that we
How is the progress on this?
I've approximated some of the colour fixes by using the colour zones module
and using the standard color matrix, but I have no idea if it's really
achieving the correct colours. I need to export this last even asap. I
was hoping we had a solution for this before the
Hi Victor,
If you are generally having problems matching the noise reduction in jpegs I
recommend activating the 'Profiled de-noise' module as standard. This is really
good as it adapts its strength to the type of camera and ISO setting used so
that it is usually somewhere near ideal strength f