Am Sonntag, 26. Februar 2017, 18:00:18 CET schrieb Michael:
[...]
> 3- basecurve (that blurs details)
As others pointed out, basecurve can't blur anything.
> 4- color balance (blurs even more)
Neither can color balance blur things. However, it's not a module that gets
applied by default.
On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 14:47:55 -0800
junkyardspar...@yepmail.net wrote:
>Looks like the X-Pro2 was added to lensfun database in december:
>
> https://github.com/lensfun/lensfun/blob/master/data/db/mil-fujifilm.xml
>
>You could just download that file (the Raw link) and add it to
Oops, I forgot that darktable won't load lensfun database files with a
'version="2"' parameter... sorry. Attached is a stripped down entry for just
the X-Pro2 you can use instead. Don't forget to restore your system
mil-fujifilm.xml file to original. :)
On Mon, Feb 27, 2017, at 18:06,
* darkta...@911networks.com [02-27-17 10:53]:
> On Mon, 27 Feb 2017 07:44:41 +
> Mikhail Trishchenkov wrote:
>
> >пн, 27 февр. 2017 г. в 14:29, Christian Kanzian
> >:
> >
> >> Please try to double-click the filmroll
There's some other bad interactions on Wayland. Scrolling to move through
images in lighttable mode doesn't work. Scrolling on the image in darkroom mode
(almost always?) doesn't zoom the image. Keyboard input will be ignored from
time to time (especially after a bit of interaction in darkroom
Am Montag, 27. Februar 2017, 14:36:10 CET schrieb darkta...@911networks.com:
> I have a X-PRO2 with a 27mm pancake lens.
>
> DT 2.2.3 on arch.
>
> When I do lens correction, I get "camera/lens not found". The lens
> has been correctly identified by not the camera.
>
> Cameras > Fujifilm > it
The Rec2020 RGB seeems to work best! however, it seems to make normal
shades of blue excessivly green.. I suppose I have to change depending
on the scene and subject! But thanks for the info..
On 26/02/17 19:26, David Vincent-Jones wrote:
Try changing the 'input color profile' ... the
This is the expected effect of basecurve with an image that is close
to saturation. All or almost all base curves increase image contrast
and thus lift the highlights; if the unaltered highlights are close to
clipping, the base curve will push them over into it.
My approach to dealing with this