> The old standard reference, 18% gray, is a little dark for white
> balance use although it does work fine in good light ... that's
> supposed to be a Zone V gray. I prefer to use a Zone VIII gray,
> about 60% gray reflectance.
OK, now I'm getting somewhere. I've had less than 300 shutter re
On Feb 13, 2007, at 10:40 AM, John Whittingham wrote:
>> I doubt you have to re-install anything, though. Finding the *right*
>> gray spot to sample is the trick. ;-)
>
> You mean like using the grey card as we all did with film, yes? I
> never
> considered that *light* grey.
The old standard
> I doubt you have to re-install anything, though. Finding the *right*
> gray spot to sample is the trick. ;-)
You mean like using the grey card as we all did with film, yes? I never
considered that *light* grey.
John
--
On Feb 13, 2007, at 8:09 AM, John Whittingham wrote:
>> The key to getting a good white balance is to find and sample a
>> light gray area, not a white area...
>
> I've tried that at first but it never seemed right, maybe I need to
> re-
> install. BTW which version of ACR are you using?
Right
> The key to getting a good white balance is to find and sample a
> light gray area, not a white area...
I've tried that at first but it never seemed right, maybe I need to re-
install. BTW which version of ACR are you using?
John
-
The key to getting a good white balance is to find and sample a light
gray area, not a white area...
G
On Feb 13, 2007, at 2:23 AM, John Whittingham wrote:
> It's great when you have a definitive reference for white, but
> caused me no
> end of trouble with my recent Cormorant cock-up 8)
>
>
That makes sense. In any case, I do intend to try the calibration. I
bookmarked your reference page.
Paul
On Feb 13, 2007, at 7:01 AM, Digital Image Studio wrote:
> On 13/02/07, Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I'm with Godders on this one. What's more, the ideal color
>> temperature
On 13/02/07, Paul Stenquist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm with Godders on this one. What's more, the ideal color
> temperature varies depending on the situation, IMO. For example, when
> I shot wedding reception pics in a somewhat dark restaurant with
> tungsten lighting, I chose to keep the loo
> Personally, I've tried several different sets of ACR calibrations
> for the *ist DS and K10D that people have posted here and elsewhere
> ... and all of them produced results as default starting points for
> color balance that were farther off the mark than just opening the
> DNG file and
I'm with Godders on this one. What's more, the ideal color
temperature varies depending on the situation, IMO. For example, when
I shot wedding reception pics in a somewhat dark restaurant with
tungsten lighting, I chose to keep the look warm. When I shot ice-
storm pics, I went for a cold,
ACR = Adobe Camera RAW.
Cheers,
Dave
At 01:06 AM 13/02/2007, Jens Bladt wrote:
> What is ACR, Rob? I curious, since I am definitely going to keep my *ist D!
>Regards
>Jens
>
>Jens Bladt
>Nytarkort / Greeting Card:
>http://www.jensbladt.dk/godtnytaar2007/lydshow.html
>
>http://www.jensbladt.dk
>
Adobe Camera Raw.
Personally, I've tried several different sets of ACR calibrations for
the *ist DS and K10D that people have posted here and elsewhere ...
and all of them produced results as default starting points for color
balance that were farther off the mark than just opening the DNG f
Funny, you shoud say that JCO'C. I have been thingking the same since I got
the K10D. The redish cast in the (over) exposed areas have alwasy sbeen a
PITA to me:-)
But unlike the K10D, ito's not possible to fine tune the WB.
Jens Bladt
Nytarkort / Greeting Card:
http://www.jensbladt.dk/godtnytaar2
What is ACR, Rob? I curious, since I am definitely going to keep my *ist D!
Regards
Jens
Jens Bladt
Nytarkort / Greeting Card:
http://www.jensbladt.dk/godtnytaar2007/lydshow.html
http://www.jensbladt.dk
+45 56 63 77 11
+45 23 43 85 77
Skype: jensbladt248
-Oprindelig meddelelse-
Fra: [EM
14 matches
Mail list logo