When I shoot raw it's not so much of a problem as, when I am shooting
raw, I am usually doing something that I can spend time on making sure
is right ie: in the studio or interiors etc and I can check histograms
and grey balance and all the other things I need and then put it through
a raw process. 

It's when I do events and shoot hundreds of jpgs without time to check
each one, a quick glance to make sure the facial expressions are okay
and then onto the next shot. I use ttl on the flash and spend as much
time afterwards correcting images with the camera opened up by 2/3rds of
a stop as if it is set 'correctly'. 

Thanks for all the suggestions and advice though but it seems a fairly
unanswerable question ... so far! I'm intrigued Thomas and Neil's next
seminar ...

Jim


>I'll evade this question a bit and say yes and no.
>Yes you can profile a camera, and it may do exactly what you need - or
not.

>However there is an applications in the pipeline that will be a great
leap
>in camera profiling. Being under NDA I can't say more, however I can
say
>that in Neil Barstow and my own seminar to be (Februrary - date not
settled
>yet) we plan to cover camera profiling in depth...




===============================================================
GO TO http://www.prodig.org for ~ GUIDELINES ~ un/SUBSCRIBING ~ ITEMS for SALE

Reply via email to