Craig Jones
Forum Enthusiast
I can see you aren't in it for the discussion, only for the disrepect (despite what you say). Why did you enter this thread anyway?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Please ignore this sort of garbage. Responding to it only clogs otherwise useful and informative threads, which this has been up to now.Hide? More like not waste my time. What have you contributed here?
I mean, rather than insults.
--I use BetaRGB.....
http://brucelindbloom.com/index.html?BetaRGB.html
Reccomended by Julia Borg as one of the better free RGB workingspaces.
Dont know if any better free ones have come to light since that
reccomendation.
Roman
--
'Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is
that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our
darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who are we to be
brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous.
Actually, who are we not to be?'
--Marianne Williamson
http://www.pbase.com/romansphotos/
--Since when do you use BetaRGB and do you feel or know that the
results are better since using it?
Timur
--I use BetaRGB.....
http://brucelindbloom.com/index.html?BetaRGB.html
Reccomended by Julia Borg as one of the better free RGB workingspaces.
Dont know if any better free ones have come to light since that
reccomendation.
Roman
--
'Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is
that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our
darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, who are we to be
brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous.
Actually, who are we not to be?'
--Marianne Williamson
http://www.pbase.com/romansphotos/
Visit http://www.voider.net
No, it's not just the title of a film.....Hide? More like not waste my time. What have you contributed here?
I mean, rather than insults.
Certainly the Borgs and Bruce Lindbloom are right up there in terms of expertise. Mr. Lindbloom designed BetaRGB to be as small as possible yet encode all the important colors in his color set, which included colors of the MacBeth color checker, various film and photographic paper stocks, and FOGRA color sets, which I take to represent printing press colors.I try to focus more on photography than the geek side of the
fence.....I trust the Borgs (both of them) to provide factual and
highly detailed information.
Through my research and readings on the web from people who are far
more intelligent on the subject than I....I do know one thing....you
dont want a color space too large OR too small.....I would hazard a
guess that BetaRGB is probably as close to "just right" as you can
get for free.
If they reccomend somthing....as far as I am concerned...it is fact
and I follow it (if possable). They arent infallable I am sure...but
their batting average is insanely high on the correct side of the
fence.
They are members of a very short list of people I trust that much.
Thom Hogan would be up there as well...
Roman
We are talking here not about the real world, but about what of that real world can be recorded by the sensor, and how it can be recorded. The idea of using a hypothetical space, basically designed to be a universum of colours, to a limited task is wrong. You waste encoding, the same way as you waste encoding not using gamut-mapped device links. Limited encoding is one of the key issues, the blotchy noise in shadows is one of the results of it.Kodak and Prof. Gernot Hoffmann have researched real world surface
colors, which represent colors occurring in nature from
non-self-luminous reflectors
Kodak and Prof. Gernot Hoffmann have researched real world surface
colors, which represent colors occurring in nature from
non-self-luminous reflectors
While, technically speaking, digital cameras do not have a gamut, they can record nearly the entire visible spectrum from 380-750 nm as demonstrated by Christian Buil and others. See section 9 of Buil's paper:We are talking here not about the real world, but about what of that
real world can be recorded by the sensor, and how it can be recorded.
The idea of using a hypothetical space, basically designed to be a
universum of colours, to a limited task is wrong. You waste encoding,
the same way as you waste encoding not using gamut-mapped device
links. Limited encoding is one of the key issues, the blotchy noise
in shadows is one of the results of it.
Conversion of the working space rendered by the raw converter to another working space is an unnecessary complication, as you correctly point out. For most purposes, 16 bit integer encoding would give sufficient quality and 32 bit floating point may not be necessary. Perhaps you can demonstrate examples of the blotchiness you mention.Take an sRGB colour of (48,7,7) and of (47,7,7). Convert those to
ProPhoto RGB. With any given encoding width you will have this issue.
You won't have that much of it in floating, but still you will have
it. The whole idea of colour conversion in raw converter other then
for output (and even there it is better to output in corrected Lab
space) is unnecessary complication, source of problems, the cure that
is worse then the disease. Not to mention the disease by itself is
imaginary: strive for one size fits all never turned out well.
when you start editing or shifting colours in the image which you can easily do by changing something as simple as whitebalance!colours then?
Quite true, the input gamut is not limited. Output gamut is.While, technically speaking, digital cameras do not have a gamut,
they can record nearly the entire visible spectrum from 380-750 nm
Like IR, for example.current
sensors can capture colors well outside the gamut of sRGB and aRGB.
Can you reconstruct all real world colours from camera capture? If not, then huge colour spaces are extraneous for output.if one wishes to capture all the colors in a
digital camera capture, it would be necessary to render into a wide
working space such as ProPhotoRGB.
Yes, but. Output devices like printers, projectors, and monitors have nothing to do with capture and raw conversion. It is a separate issue. What captured is captured, and output device can only use the captured colours directly or map them to something else. Intermediate colour space of raw converter has nothing to do with that. The choice of intermediate working space in Photoshop is a different issue. Clear separation between raw converter and Photoshop is essential when we address the colour issues.Output devices are continually being improved, and it may not be wise
to limit the gamut of your working space to the gamut of the output
device.
Not for DNG workflow. Do you know how many bits ACR/LR use internally? 20+?For most purposes, 16 bit integer encoding would give sufficient quality
The example with 2 colours I suggested demonstrates exactly that and is in line with my practical experience with ACR, especially with higher ISO shots.Perhaps you can demonstrate examples of the blotchiness
you mention.
You have no other choice with Adobe converters and scenes with vivid colours, they use ProPhoto RGB chromaticities internally and clip the output if other output colour space is selected. However if clipping on the ACR histogram is not observed a smaller output colour space can be used, having more efficient coding of gradations. Images will only benefit from such a coding.For my personal work, I use ProPhotoRGB and am pleased with the
results. Bruce Fraser had a similar approach as does Adobe Lightroom.