Guy Parsons
Forum Pro
The M6 is still new to me and experimenting, first "serious" outing day+night in Sydney. Letting it run P mode and see ISO 6400 at times.
Jpegs on kitchen 24" Philips TV look darn good, later at night on 43" LG 4K TV they somehow looked drab.
On this Philips 24" monitor attached to a notebook they look good, calibrated and gets maybe 90% of sRGB gamut. On desktop with expensive 10 bit 24" monitor calibrated and easily gets 100% of sRGB then they look better again.
Currently using DxO Photolab2 to crunch all the raw files to jpegs and will try the TVs again. The default DxO conversion does seem to pump up the colours a bit and seems to over-do the reds, but maybe that's just what the TV screens may need, we'll see later.
With the 4K TV I needed to get within about 4 or 5 feet of the screen to see the noise in the ISO 6400 shots, back at normal pop-corn eating distance then there were no noise issues at all, it all looks good.
One thing, I am constantly amazed at how good the lens is. Having so much fun with the M6 that I suspect my M4/3 gear may stay at home much more.
Here's a random shot from the day in the city.... (resized to 1620x1080).....

First pass with default DxO conversion, camera jpeg looks OK but when I compare side by side in FastStone Viewer then the DxO version looks better, the sky is a truer blue and the whites are cleaner and whiter with DxO. Hmmmm, more comparisons needed.
Regards...... Guy
Jpegs on kitchen 24" Philips TV look darn good, later at night on 43" LG 4K TV they somehow looked drab.
On this Philips 24" monitor attached to a notebook they look good, calibrated and gets maybe 90% of sRGB gamut. On desktop with expensive 10 bit 24" monitor calibrated and easily gets 100% of sRGB then they look better again.
Currently using DxO Photolab2 to crunch all the raw files to jpegs and will try the TVs again. The default DxO conversion does seem to pump up the colours a bit and seems to over-do the reds, but maybe that's just what the TV screens may need, we'll see later.
With the 4K TV I needed to get within about 4 or 5 feet of the screen to see the noise in the ISO 6400 shots, back at normal pop-corn eating distance then there were no noise issues at all, it all looks good.
One thing, I am constantly amazed at how good the lens is. Having so much fun with the M6 that I suspect my M4/3 gear may stay at home much more.
Here's a random shot from the day in the city.... (resized to 1620x1080).....

First pass with default DxO conversion, camera jpeg looks OK but when I compare side by side in FastStone Viewer then the DxO version looks better, the sky is a truer blue and the whites are cleaner and whiter with DxO. Hmmmm, more comparisons needed.
Regards...... Guy





