CAMERA PROFILE
Hallo,
After a open house in Milano of Phase One I follow an advice of a fashion photographer that normally use "no coloro correction" profile or "color view"...
I tried to used it and the colors are more easy co correct above all when there are white wall in interiors pictures that normally have many color dominance, it depend by the color light that enter by the windows... ( you know what I mean)
Anybody use RGB profile?
What's the difference? Are there any documentations about the profile settings of Capture One
My best regards.
Fabrizio
After a open house in Milano of Phase One I follow an advice of a fashion photographer that normally use "no coloro correction" profile or "color view"...
I tried to used it and the colors are more easy co correct above all when there are white wall in interiors pictures that normally have many color dominance, it depend by the color light that enter by the windows... ( you know what I mean)
Anybody use RGB profile?
What's the difference? Are there any documentations about the profile settings of Capture One
My best regards.
Fabrizio
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[quote="fabrizio cicconi" wrote:
Anybody use RGB profile?
Hi Fabrizio,
Not sure what you mean with the question. All profiles for the camera are RGB profiles.0 -
yes I know,
but in CO when you choose profile, >ICC Profile>Other>"Camera RGB Profile"
What kind of profile is it?
I can see that is a limited profile, is not possible make a color correction, but why Phase One made this profile?0 -
I don't see a "Camera RGB Profile".
Which camera are you using, Fabrizio?0 -
Hi Fabrizio,
Regarding the "Camera RGB Profile", this is a generic profile delivered by OS X, and located under /System/Library/Frameworks/...
The same counts for "Scanner RGB Profile". These are sRGB-shaped profiles, but intended for use as input profile, where sRGB is a output profile.
Regarding the use of the No Color Correction or Color View profile as camera profile, I would be hesitant to use that. If you like it, it is OK, of course. My hesitation comes from the fact that these profiles to not provide for the specific color characteristics of your camera, and that their color gamut is much smaller than the default camera profile. Hence, you throw a lot of color out of the window even before you got started.
If I need to adjust the default profile, my first step would be to use the color editor and save adjustments in a new custom profile. It is easy to make a low saturation version, one for landscape or portrait purposes, etc.0 -
thank a lot,
I've an iQ 260
I like the color view, because for the interiors pictures the colors are easier to adjust, and you can see the the result on my website... fabriziocicconi.it
Above all the reflections on the white walls...
Maybe if I use less saturations I obtain the same...?
Sometime I use the mask to obtain it, but is very approssimative the CO mask...
it could be grate if with the mask it could be possible make a white balance and not only use color corrections, or HDR too..
I will try to make a color profile with color editor... Could you give me a link where is explicate how to make it?
Thank again,
My best.0 -
[quote="fabrizio cicconi" wrote:
...
I will try to make a color profile with color editor... Could you give me a link where is explicate how to make it?
Hi Fabrizio,
For a start, see:
http://help.phaseone.com/en/CO7/Editing ... aspx#item5
You will find more links in that section.
Beautiful images by the way... 😉0 -
Thank a lot,
but I need a general profile, I can not to do a profile for every picture.
a profile that is right for the interior, a profile for daylight, one for portraits etc...
For this reason the "color view" is a profile that satisfied all that situation... I have ti make a profile like "daylight" or Portrait" with the same characteristics of "color view", but with all the range of color gamut..
Thank again,
I found other tool that I never see...
I use Color Editor many time, but the black o white point pick, I never used...0
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