On 23/10/17 18:10, Thomas Werzmirzowsky wrote:
Gesendet: Montag, 23. Oktober 2017 um 07:47 Uhr
Von: "Robert William Hutton" <[email protected]>
I found creating my own matrix from a Wolf Faust target worked really well,
Tim Rolph also mentioned the Wolf Faust target but I have to admit that looking at the
website I don't know what to order. What "Order #" would be the right one?
You want the "C1" from this page:
http://www.targets.coloraid.de/
Note how it says "camera (not scanners)" in the "Use with" column.
but ultimately decided that having the additional dependency of having that
profile present if I wanted
to re-edit the images at a later date wasn't worth it, and I do much as you do:
use the standard
profile. Sometimes also setting the gamut clipping to linear rec2020 is a good
option as well.
I don't really get that. Don't you have to create the profile just once and
then it's done? As the color mapping should contain all colours it shouldn't
change from photo shot to phot phot, should it? Or would it be needed to create
a new matrix for every photo shot just like doing a gray card shot for the
white balance?
The process is to create an icc file which then goes in your ~/.config/darktable/color/in directory.
So you can back up your images directory, which gives you your raw and xmp files (everything you
need to regenerate your edits), but the xmp files now depend on a file that lives in your home
directory.
I'm sure you could work around this by putting the icc file with your images and symlinking to it or
something, but I decided it wasn't something I wanted to worry about.
I can probably dig up the 60D profile if you'd like to try it.
It would be great if you could lookup the profile. I'd like to give it a try.
https://www.dropbox.com/s/lupf36wt05m3c5x/Canon_EOS_60D_Standard.icc?dl=0
Regards,
Rob
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