Coincidentally to the post by Per Östlund, I also have an issue with
blue colors in an image.
In an image of blue-violett pansies I get strong fringes, especially
around out-of-focus blossoms. See the dark flowers (OOF) on the right.
Standard colour matrix:
In this sequence, where does an optional rescale at export take place?
Regards,
Oliver
Am Sonntag, den 12.02.2017, 20:56 + schrieb Jordi Besora:
> Hi again
>
> Oh my! I just found it in the manual! On page 67 in the pdf version,
> at the end of section "3.3.7. Module groups", it says:
>
>
After opening and closing darktable a few times, running it on the
command line etc., the problem is gone. Profiled denoise now works as
expected. No clue what was wrong.
I _swear_ I didn't change anything! ;-)
Sorry for reducing the signal-to-noise ratio.
Oliver
Hi,
after upgrading my Ubuntu system to 16.04.1 and using darktable 2.2.1.
from PPA
ojo@apollo:~$ dpkg -l | grep darktable
ii darktable 1:2.2.1-
0pmjdebruijn1~xenial amd64Virtual lighttable
and darkroom for photographers
ii
Am Dienstag, den 17.01.2017, 20:12 +0100 schrieb Stéphane Gourichon:
> Hello,
>
> Can you share raw, JPEG-from-dt, XMP (and possibly screenshot with
> explanations) on some site for others on the list to see ?
As I'm reluctant to post personal photos, I can't show you an example
with skin
One more question: do you have a style applied when exporting?
Oliver
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I'm not really happy with the colours dt produces from the raw files of
my Canon EOS M3.
E.g. in a photo taken of someone on a bright day in snow, the OOC jpegs
have more saturation and brightness in the sky, the snow looks cooler
(especially the shadows have more blue), whereas the skin tones
Hi,
using profiled denoise (wavelet, blend mode: colour) with images from my
Canon M3 produces prominent green dots with strength = 4.
A screenshot showing difference between strength = 4 (left) and strength
set to 1 (right):
https://www.dropbox.com/s/b6ri2gweimdqoyc/comparison.png?dl=0
In
cases the result is - in my experience - better than without
using this module (although perhaps technically a exposure time of 1/125
should not lead to dead/hot pixels).
Oliver
Am Donnerstag, den 03.11.2016, 22:00 +0300 schrieb Roman Lebedev:
> On Thu, Nov 3, 2016 at 9:49 PM, Oliver Bedf