Generally speaking the Auto setting produced the best results, with the camera selectively choosing (this is an assumption based on observation) either Normal or Contrast - curves. Contrast - is useful if you're going to be post-processing the images as it produces the "flattest" image without clipping the low or high end of the grayscale. I used Contrast - quite a bit, knowing that I'd be 'leveling' the image later in Photoshop.
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| CSM 32-0: sRGB colorspace | CSM 32-1: Adobe RGB (1998) colorspace |
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The crop directly below the images shows how Adobe RGB is the professionals choice, it's far better at maintaining deep or bright colours (because of its wider colour gamut), the sRGB image has already 'blown out' this bright colours.
I personally found the best formula was to shoot exclusively in Adobe RGB and then convert the image to sRGB later if the image was destined for the web, that way you maintain the maximum colour gamut and accuracy in the original image. Click here for an sRGB converted version of the Adobe RGB image above (notice how the colours are a little less saturated than the D1H native sRGB).
The selected colourspace isn't written into the JPEG/TIFF header in any standard way. That is if you drag a D1H JPEG into Photoshop it doesn't know what colourspace it was shot in and will assume sRGB, you'll have to either set your working profile to Adobe RGB (assumed) or assign each image as you load it. HOWEVER, resave the image in Nikon Capture 2 or convert a RAW file and it will be tagged with the colour profile and Photoshop can automatically assign the correct profile.
The Hue Adjustment option allows you to make very subtle changes to the colour balance of the output image. The manual describes this feature like this "Although the camera's sophisticated metering and white balance are capable of reproducing colors accurately under almost all lighting conditions, you may want to adjust hue to cope with unusual lighting conditions or to deliberately introduce a color cast into the image".
A value of 3 is 'neutral' (the default), values below this will push colours towards purple, values above this push colours towards yellow. Directly below the thumbnail for the image is its RGB histogram map.
Settings: ISO 200 / Exposure: 1/15s, F9.0 / Sharp.: Normal / Tone: Normal / Colorspace: sRGB / STD. JPEG
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| 33-0: Hue 0 (Purple cast) | 33-0: Hue 1 | 33-0: Hue 2 |
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| 33-0: Hue 3 (Normal) | ||
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| 33-4: Hue 4 | 33-5: Hue 5 | 33-6: Hue 6 (Yellow cast) |
The D1H ships with the latest incarnation of Nikon's image file transfer, browsing and viewing application Nikon View. This tool assists you in transferring images directly from the camera (or card reader) to your local PC. You can read a detailed explanation of Nikon View 4 in my D1x review.