The first thing I did was try an identical white balance preset (cloudy) but this just showed that the light must have changed between the two shots. Perhaps a cloud went in front of the sun in the 5 minutes between shots?
The best way to deal with this is to use a spot white balance on a non-overexposed white or grey area. Here's the result of using the white patch on the dog's forehead: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/xmjuqgxs0ofx9uk/AADPSmzqfj4GTMBptbTmcZYUa?dl=0 Regards, Rob On 04/02/16 13:18, darkta...@911networks.com wrote: > On Wed, 3 Feb 2016 22:22:30 +0100 > Dimitrios Psychogios <dpsychog...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> The base curve is applied automatically (see >> https://www.darktable.org/usermanual/ch03s04.html.php), check that >> both have the same preset. Other than that I would recommend you >> share both raw files and their xmp files so we may help you further. > > Both the raw and the XMPs are at: > > http://we.tl/oSOJrylS1C > > I compared the XMPs with meld, only 2 lines are different: > > * The filename (expected) > * The rating. One is 0 (zero) as expected and the other one is -1 > (minus one)? Could it be because I marked it as reject? > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Site24x7 APM Insight: Get Deep Visibility into Application Performance APM + Mobile APM + RUM: Monitor 3 App instances at just $35/Month Monitor end-to-end web transactions and take corrective actions now Troubleshoot faster and improve end-user experience. Signup Now! http://pubads.g.doubleclick.net/gampad/clk?id=272487151&iu=/4140 _______________________________________________ Darktable-users mailing list Darktable-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/darktable-users