Hallöchen! HaJo Schatz writes:
> I guess your proper solution (I assume you're in some sort of > studio setting with a lighting situation that doesn't change > throughout your shoot) would be to place a color chart where your > subject will be and shoot that. Then go on and shoot your subjects > and later in DT develop your color chart properly first (compare > the real chart and what you see on your calibrated monitor). These > settings should then develop your other RAWs properly. Normally, colour charts come with a file containing the spectral reference data. Then, you can use Argyll to generate the ICC file for proper colour rendering. The details are described at http://www.argyllcms.com/doc/Scenarios.html#PS3 and I recommend to use dcraw for the TIFF generation rather than DT. Tschö, Torsten. -- Torsten Bronger Jabber ID: torsten.bron...@jabber.rwth-aachen.de or http://bronger-jmp.appspot.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ See everything from the browser to the database with AppDynamics Get end-to-end visibility with application monitoring from AppDynamics Isolate bottlenecks and diagnose root cause in seconds. Start your free trial of AppDynamics Pro today! http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=48808831&iu=/4140/ostg.clktrk _______________________________________________ Darktable-users mailing list Darktable-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users