DIVU and colour (color) matching

Tim Woodward

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After reading what seems like a years worth of discussion in this group about the above subject I thought (now that I have my own Dimage 7!) I would check out these phenomena myself and publish the results should anyone have got this far!

The general argument seems to go that colour matching the image produced by the D7 on your computer screen and comparing this with how you remember the original scene produces variable results - many of you seem to think using DIVU adds an incorrect colour balance to the image, and yet others, Minolta and some reviewers seem to think DIVU is indispensable in getting the D7 colour space (which is a wider gamut than typical) into what is a more standard and presumably more accurate rendition.

My D7 actually arrived with an extra slip of paper in the packing, obviously added after production and I quote from this “The DiMAGE7 utilises a wider colourspace than most consumer digital cameras. Part of this colourspace is created with information achieved from the CxProcess image processing system. To ensure that your images maintain faithful yet vivid colours it is preferable to use the Minolta Image Viewer Utility to acquire your images from the camera”

So I set about viewing a fairly varied set of images taken over the last few days with my D7 - in various colourspaces and with various options set (on a PC not MAC I’m afraid).

Images were taken at the typical ‘default’ highest JPEG (RAW imports into DIVU are another issue entirely!) quality and size - i.e. ‘Fine’ and ‘2560’.

As far as ‘converted’ images were concerned, these tests were performed loading images into DIVU:

1. With Colour Matching ‘on’

2. With various Output Colour Spaces as alternatives (including ICC profile matching)

3. Viewed both with and without Basic Colour Management enabled within PaintShop Pro 7

4. Saved as TIFF files (JPEG was avoided so as not to increase lossy compression with each save)

As far as ‘unconverted’ images were concerned, I simply dragged the images directly from the card untouched and dropped them into a folder entitled ‘un-converted’ for reference. Opening them directly in PSP for comparison.

Obviously certain criteria affect the outcome of these results and it is important that you have a level playing field for colour management to work. For instance, if you have no colour management options set within your image manipulation program then the results will be very different than if you use a colour management profile. Also how the image looks on the Web (browser rendered ) or on another monitor with different colourspace or profile is totally unpredictable (which is where I think most of the argument comes from). Also your monitor Gamma should be calibrated using what ever tools you have - I used the options within PSP 7.

So what did I find - well, in the event I found that all of the colour matching alternatives within DIVU resulted in darker and more colourful images than those that were unconverted. With colour management on in PSP and choosing the sRGB profile (installed by default in the windows/system/color folder) the results were darker still.

However, on close examination of all the various colour matching options offered (including ICM matching to the sRGB colourspace) I found a quite distinctive problem with the DIVU conversion. DIVU obviously matches to the nearest colour whilst reducing the Gamut, but in so doing seems to be influenced by the colours around that colour. So for example grasses appeared greener, but when magnified and compared with an unconverted image it was obvious some of the more subtle colours had been lost in the conversion - many being changed to shades of the predominant green. This might initially look more vivid from a distance - but seemed to result in a ‘cast’ in some images and a slightly ‘unreal’ effect in other less colourful shots.

The original unconverted JPEG was certainly less vivid in comparison, but on closer examination offered the far more accurate and truthful rendition. Incidentally, experiments with increasing the saturation of the unconverted image in PSP (if you wanted a more vivid rendition) had far more accurate results than the DIVU conversion.

Of course this result is affected by the colourspace and Gamma of your monitor and taking off the PSP colour management resulted in a more washed out unconverted image and a slightly more acceptable (less dark but still colourcast) converted version.

As a further check I opened the unconverted image in a browser (to avoid PSP profiling) and likewise a converted JPEG (converted in DIVU sRGB ICC colour matching mode) and found the unconverted JPEG was absolutely colour identical in the browser as it was in the profiled PSP environment (probably because this is my default monitor profile as well actually - doh!) and the converted JPEG exhibited the same cast problems as it did within PSP colourspace.

So - my conclusions are - I personally won’t use DIVU to convert from the wider DiMAGE gamut to sRGB (or whatever I am using as a colourspace) as it doesn’t seem to offer best colour conversion in my opinion and under my controlled conditions. Although PSP obviously has to read in the gamut of the D7 JPEG as best it can (and probably discards the colours outside of the gamut of the profile installed) this still results in a more accurate colour rendition - as opposed to DIVU’s obvious trait of adding colours together to reduce the overall gamut - all interesting stuff.

A thought does occur - I wonder if Minolta originally intended DIVU to be used in colour matching mode to only deal with RAW images (as with colour matching off it doesn’t mess with JPEG colour at all and the images saved as TIFF are identical to unconverted JPEGs!). More information required obviously, still I hope this helps anyone who has got this far and like me was still unsure!
 
Post some evidence. Especially of your 'color cast' theory. I personally do not care about sRBG (too small), so as far as I am concerned I want to see the Adobe RGB conversions vs. unconverted.

I once, a long time ago now, also did a very careful study of the DIVU conversion (to sRGB and Adobe RGB) and non-conversion and determined that the DIVU conversion was definitely the more accurate. At least as far as I could tell.

I think they are pretty clear that the conversion is for all pictures no matter the format of the file.

Mike Roberts
 
Tim, it seems to me that the colour shades you are losing are due to the very increased contrast that DIVU implements to the provessed images. This has been discussed here an infinite number of times. If you have some time to spare, search the MINOLTA thread for terms such as DIVU, colourspace etc and you will come up with looooooots of info.

On the other hand, if you do not have so much time to spare..... well..... Bryan's DIVUfix. It's that simple!

--Pablettowww.pbase.com/pabletto(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
Isn't it past your bedtime over there in jolly old E? :)
Tim, it seems to me that the colour shades you are losing are due
to the very increased contrast that DIVU implements to the
provessed images. This has been discussed here an infinite number
of times. If you have some time to spare, search the MINOLTA thread
for terms such as DIVU, colourspace etc and you will come up with
looooooots of info.
On the other hand, if you do not have so much time to spare.....
well..... Bryan's DIVUfix. It's that simple!

--
Pabletto

http://www.pbase.com/pabletto
(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)
Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
Isn't it past your bedtime over there in jolly old E? :)
Weeeeell past my bedtime, but I get my sleepess night occassionally. Well.... usually. Alright, alright..... every night (almost)!
Still here though and awake!

--Pablettowww.pbase.com/pabletto(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
I've done similar work but on a Mac and for some reason seems to be easier to achieve the expected results
My results are
  • on the Mac using DIVU (in a proper way) gives excellent colors in at least 90 % of all cases;
the 10 % other are usually pics that wrong color to start with - something I went back to the place to verify
  • the highest importance is the working space you convert to in DIVU : I got the best results with wide gamut spaces (wide gamut rgb, BestRGB, proPhotoRGB);
Insteads of losing shades of green, with the good working space barious shades of color (for examples green of grass) becomes bery visible while with the wrong working space the green is losing shades;

Using the "good" working space also improves the shadow/highlight balance, for example a faint grey sky suddenly becomes light blue with some clouds (as it was originally)

a coirrect working (destinatiuon) space also avoids color casts (blue !) reproduces the heavy reds with detail

I use Photohop 6 as editor - most of the D7 pics nedd little or no color correction after the DIVU conversion - the pictures of my previous camera (Olympus 2500L) needed color improvement most of the time !

From the many discussions, I noticed that getting the same results with DIVU seems more problematic - so do like Mike Roberts -

Bryan Biggers mad a modified minolta profiles that solves a great deal of the problems
Henri
Tim Woodward wrote:
-- Pluche
 
From the many discussions, I noticed that getting the same results
with DIVU seems more problematic - so do like Mike Roberts -
Be like Mike!

I assume by that you mean convert to Adobe RGB and save as TIF.

Mike Roberts
 
Of course I meant that (should have mentionned it again) note that on the Mac converting in DIVU to AdobeRGB causes visible color casts
henri

PS: somle time ago I e-mailed you a test pic, just to find out how that looked on your PC - colors & contrast etc... did you receive that ??
From the many discussions, I noticed that getting the same results
with DIVU seems more problematic - so do like Mike Roberts -
Be like Mike!

I assume by that you mean convert to Adobe RGB and save as TIF.

Mike Roberts
-- Pluche
 
PS: somle time ago I e-mailed you a test pic, just to find out how
that looked on your PC - colors & contrast etc... did you receive
that ??
Probably, but as I have just moved into a new house in the middle of January, been in a crunch at work until the middle of February, and feeding my cat though a tube in her neck for the last 3 weeks I have not really had much inkling to do anything requiring to much brainpower.

Mike Roberts
 
Sorry to have been so long - yes I know, I have read most of it! The biggest problem I think is the fact that everyones VDU will show a different colout cast depending on age/colour space/gamma etc.

On mine DIVU has a real green/yellow cast - but then non-divu is a little bit wishy washy...whats Brian DIVUfix and can I have one to play with please...!
Tim, it seems to me that the colour shades you are losing are due
to the very increased contrast that DIVU implements to the
provessed images. This has been discussed here an infinite number
of times. If you have some time to spare, search the MINOLTA thread
for terms such as DIVU, colourspace etc and you will come up with
looooooots of info.
On the other hand, if you do not have so much time to spare.....
well..... Bryan's DIVUfix. It's that simple!

--
Pabletto

http://www.pbase.com/pabletto
(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)
Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
whats Brian DIVUfix and can I have one to
play with please...!
It is an 'application' that has rendered DIVU usable again, for us PC users. You can forgat all about the excessive contrasty images produced by the default MINOLTA profiles provided with DIVU.

http://webpages.charter.net/bbiggers/divufix.zip

This ones, sort of reprogrammes the curve by which the conversion takes place, thus resulting in less contrasty images, less highlights and more shadow details.

You can adjust you personal curve to you liking. Full instructions should be included in the zip. And remember , we are always here.--Pablettowww.pbase.com/pabletto(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
First of all I am really sorry Mike and Pabetto for not to have got back to this thread sooner - I have been away very busy working - sadly!

Anyway - I downloaded divufix last night and had a really long play (with Bryan's latest curve) - and although the images are slightly better the problem still applies - i.e. dark images, poor colour matching into other colours (as mentioned in my original post).

I reckon my problem is the colourspace - as so many of you aren't having such exreme colour problems as me (believe me you wouldn't use divu if you were) so perhaps the Mac and Photoshop users are getting a better results (as per Henri's post!) down to monitor gamma and colourspace.

Which leads me to my next question - where do I get a wider colourspace profile from - I don't have Photoshop (I use PSP 7) so all I have is sRGB. Can anyone suggest a good general purpose wider coulorspace for the PC - and where I can download the ICC files etc?
whats Brian DIVUfix and can I have one to
play with please...!
It is an 'application' that has rendered DIVU usable again, for us
PC users. You can forgat all about the excessive contrasty images
produced by the default MINOLTA profiles provided with DIVU.

http://webpages.charter.net/bbiggers/divufix.zip

This ones, sort of reprogrammes the curve by which the conversion
takes place, thus resulting in less contrasty images, less
highlights and more shadow details.
You can adjust you personal curve to you liking. Full instructions
should be included in the zip. And remember , we are always here.
--
Pabletto

http://www.pbase.com/pabletto
(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)
Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
I had used colormatching to test online website processing.

I found that the straight from camera produced the most accurate colors and best results, but who knows what they are doing before printing-

Best color came from a site that I had to question because sharpness was missing as compared with other sites- they explained that they do have a soft focus. BTW they were the cheapest and seem to have best customer service as per my experience.

Some same images appeared warmer than others between the sites. Some had blue cast, while others a slight yellow.

I have used dotPhoto, Ezprints, shutterfly, ofoto, and I am sure I'll test more, but prefer dotPhoto presently.
 
Tim,

Referencing mostly your start of this thread, a appreciate all the work youv'e done. Overall, I agree with you in that I don't like the resulting color conversion using DIVU. The DIVUfix modification of the ICC profile does make it better as it corrects for too-high contrast. But, the weak spot in your experiment is the use of PSP-7 which seems to be "locked" into an incoming color space of sRGB. Thus, it will not recognize a DIVU generated alternative embedded color space such as the wider AdobeRGB when it displays such a graphic. PSP uses the latest Windows ICM 2.0 API which should recognize and translate incoming embedded ICC or ICM profiles, but I've confirmed that PSP does not.

I did that by using DIVU to output the same Minolta picture to sRGB and AdobeRGB and observed both in PSP. The AdobeRGB appears washed out, less saturated. As a check, I compared both in QImage Pro which does recognize incoming embedded profiles. Here, both pictures were identical.

If there is a way to get PSP off of sRGB as the default and only input ["Image or graphic generated by..."] color space, I haven't figured it out as yet.

The Minolta supplied [in the DIVU \profiles folder] ICC works fine in QImage so that is what I use.

Hope this helps,

Jeff
Anyway - I downloaded divufix last night and had a really long play
(with Bryan's latest curve) - and although the images are slightly
better the problem still applies - i.e. dark images, poor colour
matching into other colours (as mentioned in my original post).

I reckon my problem is the colourspace - as so many of you aren't
having such exreme colour problems as me (believe me you wouldn't
use divu if you were) so perhaps the Mac and Photoshop users are
getting a better results (as per Henri's post!) down to monitor
gamma and colourspace.

Which leads me to my next question - where do I get a wider
colourspace profile from - I don't have Photoshop (I use PSP 7) so
all I have is sRGB. Can anyone suggest a good general purpose wider
coulorspace for the PC - and where I can download the ICC files etc?
whats Brian DIVUfix and can I have one to
play with please...!
It is an 'application' that has rendered DIVU usable again, for us
PC users. You can forgat all about the excessive contrasty images
produced by the default MINOLTA profiles provided with DIVU.

http://webpages.charter.net/bbiggers/divufix.zip

This ones, sort of reprogrammes the curve by which the conversion
takes place, thus resulting in less contrasty images, less
highlights and more shadow details.
You can adjust you personal curve to you liking. Full instructions
should be included in the zip. And remember , we are always here.
--
Pabletto

http://www.pbase.com/pabletto
(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)
Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
Hi Jeff - you are right PSP 7 won't change profiles automatically when it sees an embedded image - you can change the profile to various monitor profiles in File/Preferences/Colour Management - but I don't have any other ICC profiles on my system to play with :-(

PS. The Minolta profile in the Divu folder just brings-up an error message that says it it a camera/scanner profile and can't be used on a monitor!

PPS. Minolta says (received today!):

Dear Sir,

As long as colour photography has existed people have discussed at length
the merits of particular films, papers and developers. As we enter the
digital world we are all starting over again.

This shows no signs of ever being resolved as ever human can perceive
colours differently, it is scientifically proven that females see colours
differently to men.

Therefore your desired representation is not how the Minolta technicians
have set the DIVU colourspace. Minolta as a manufacturer of technical
equipment for colour capture, printing and even spectral analysis does have
a great deal of experience in this field. Minolta does balance its colours
towards the natural tones rather than bold, brash 'in your face' colours.

This can lead people to believe they are flat and lifeless. The image when
passed through DIVU gives an image to the Minolta standard that it believes
is a true representation of the scene at that moment. If you feel otherwise
then opportunity is provided within DIVU to manipulate the image to your
desired taste.

Further than this I am unable to advise.

Regards,
[email protected]

....hmmm!
Referencing mostly your start of this thread, a appreciate all the
work youv'e done. Overall, I agree with you in that I don't like
the resulting color conversion using DIVU. The DIVUfix
modification of the ICC profile does make it better as it corrects
for too-high contrast. But, the weak spot in your experiment is
the use of PSP-7 which seems to be "locked" into an incoming color
space of sRGB. Thus, it will not recognize a DIVU generated
alternative embedded color space such as the wider AdobeRGB when it
displays such a graphic. PSP uses the latest Windows ICM 2.0 API
which should recognize and translate incoming embedded ICC or ICM
profiles, but I've confirmed that PSP does not.

I did that by using DIVU to output the same Minolta picture to sRGB
and AdobeRGB and observed both in PSP. The AdobeRGB appears washed
out, less saturated. As a check, I compared both in QImage Pro
which does recognize incoming embedded profiles. Here, both
pictures were identical.

If there is a way to get PSP off of sRGB as the default and only
input ["Image or graphic generated by..."] color space, I haven't
figured it out as yet.

The Minolta supplied [in the DIVU \profiles folder] ICC works fine
in QImage so that is what I use.

Hope this helps,

Jeff
Anyway - I downloaded divufix last night and had a really long play
(with Bryan's latest curve) - and although the images are slightly
better the problem still applies - i.e. dark images, poor colour
matching into other colours (as mentioned in my original post).

I reckon my problem is the colourspace - as so many of you aren't
having such exreme colour problems as me (believe me you wouldn't
use divu if you were) so perhaps the Mac and Photoshop users are
getting a better results (as per Henri's post!) down to monitor
gamma and colourspace.

Which leads me to my next question - where do I get a wider
colourspace profile from - I don't have Photoshop (I use PSP 7) so
all I have is sRGB. Can anyone suggest a good general purpose wider
coulorspace for the PC - and where I can download the ICC files etc?
whats Brian DIVUfix and can I have one to
play with please...!
It is an 'application' that has rendered DIVU usable again, for us
PC users. You can forgat all about the excessive contrasty images
produced by the default MINOLTA profiles provided with DIVU.

http://webpages.charter.net/bbiggers/divufix.zip

This ones, sort of reprogrammes the curve by which the conversion
takes place, thus resulting in less contrasty images, less
highlights and more shadow details.
You can adjust you personal curve to you liking. Full instructions
should be included in the zip. And remember , we are always here.
--
Pabletto

http://www.pbase.com/pabletto
(samples taken with the MINOLTA DiMAGE 7)
Last update 26 February 2002 (MORE food photos)
 
Tim,

It's not the Monitor profile you want to change. That needs to correspond to the specific profile for your monitor, or if you don't have one, the sRGB profile is the best reasonable match. The problem with PSP is that the incoming picture is also assumed to be sRGB. Ideally, you would be able to set the incoming picture [the "Image, graphic... generated by"] dialog to, say, MLTDim7j.icc which is the profile supplied by Minolta. Then, PSP would convert from it to sRGB for your monitor. For Printing it would convert from the Minolta to Printer ICC.

One other complication, I'm told some programs don't handle the Minolta ICC properly because it has an extra "tag", a contrast or tone curve. However, I've found that QImage handles it fine.

Interesting comments from Minolta....

Jeff
 
Thats interesting Jeff - I think I will try out Photoshop and see what things look like from in there - or QImage - I will download some trials and come back with my findings!!
Tim,

It's not the Monitor profile you want to change. That needs to
correspond to the specific profile for your monitor, or if you
don't have one, the sRGB profile is the best reasonable match. The
problem with PSP is that the incoming picture is also assumed to be
sRGB. Ideally, you would be able to set the incoming picture [the
"Image, graphic... generated by"] dialog to, say, MLTDim7j.icc
which is the profile supplied by Minolta. Then, PSP would convert
from it to sRGB for your monitor. For Printing it would convert
from the Minolta to Printer ICC.

One other complication, I'm told some programs don't handle the
Minolta ICC properly because it has an extra "tag", a contrast or
tone curve. However, I've found that QImage handles it fine.

Interesting comments from Minolta....

Jeff
 
Though I don't know the technical reason why, I seem to get the most natural looking colors and contrast importing the JPG's into PhotoShop using the Print Image Matching plug-in. I beleive the plug-in reads exposure information in the EXIF header. The plug-in also automatically converts the JPG to a PSD file; I don't what it does with other imaging programs.

Whatever works.
 
Where do you get this plugin from !!
Though I don't know the technical reason why, I seem to get the
most natural looking colors and contrast importing the JPG's into
PhotoShop using the Print Image Matching plug-in. I beleive the
plug-in reads exposure information in the EXIF header. The plug-in
also automatically converts the JPG to a PSD file; I don't what it
does with other imaging programs.

Whatever works.
 

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