My standards :) which I wouldn't recommend.
I must say the RAW files I'm working on now are badly exposed shots of
people in mist. Almost everything is grey. The camera was on Daylight
and selecting cloudy in Pentax RAW more or less saves the pictures.
Adobe Cloudy results in purple mist, Pentax in grey mist. I can fix it
in Adobe RAW but I don''t understand what's going on. Even selecting
the same temperature in K in Pentax or Adobe results in completely
different white balance.
Adobe RAW displays only one camera profile ACR 2.4. Do I have to tweak
these settings or can I load a Pentax specific camera profile.


On 11/20/05, Herb Chong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> wrong by what criteria? the Pentax RAW is designed to recreate exactly what
> the presets are in the camera. if you leave Adobe Camera RAW to As Shot,
> you'll get the camera preset. if you change it to the Adobe Cloudy, you will
> get what Adobe defines that to be. there isn't a standard for these presets,
> although there is high similarity.
>
> Herb...
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Jack Isidore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: <[email protected]>
> Sent: Sunday, November 20, 2005 6:56 AM
> Subject: Re: Which RAW converter?
>
>
> > If I use the same RAW shot (in camera as Daylight, should be Cloudy)
> > and select Cloudy in Pentax RAW I get exactly what I want. In Adobe
> > RAW I must select manual and use the sliders. Cloudy in Adobe would
> > result in wrong colors. Maybe I am missing something in the settings
> > of Adobe RAW. Do I need some calibration files for Adobe RAW and
> > Pentax PEF?
>
>
>

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