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Questions about "RAW develop" function

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Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #10 on: 17 / April / 2008, 07:04:00 »
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Well, if you go to Antarctica or the north pole, you dial in the daylight WB for a half year in some places :)

And you havn't answered my question. :)
There are things which i like to keep in the same color as i see: Sunsets, snow, city lights at night... and sometimes even people.
If i photograph at daylight, will these colors still remain the same? (No red, green, or blue shift?)
« Last Edit: 17 / April / 2008, 07:12:31 by thunderstorm »

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Offline PhyrePhoX

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Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #11 on: 17 / April / 2008, 07:10:42 »
well the "color of the sun rays" always stays the same, yes. so when you take pictures in bright daylight - set WB to daylight.
city lights at night... well, the sun certainly is not shining, is it. depending of the lightsource (probably the citylights themselves) you have to set WB to either tungsten or artificial light. this way (and only this way!) they will look the same as you see them.
see here: Understanding White Balance

Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #12 on: 17 / April / 2008, 15:55:00 »
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« Last Edit: 22 / April / 2008, 18:03:41 by Barney Fife »
[acseven/admin commented out: please refrain from more direct offensive language to any user. FW complaints to me] I felt it imperative to withdraw my TOTAL participation. Nobody has my permission, nor the right, to reinstate MY posts. Make-do with my quoted text in others' replies only. Bye

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Offline PhyrePhoX

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Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #13 on: 18 / April / 2008, 01:00:42 »
psst, dont tell anyone :p

Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #14 on: 27 / April / 2008, 15:40:06 »
well the "color of the sun rays" always stays the same, yes. so when you take pictures in bright daylight - set WB to daylight.
city lights at night... well, the sun certainly is not shining, is it. depending of the lightsource (probably the citylights themselves) you have to set WB to either tungsten or artificial light. this way (and only this way!) they will look the same as you see them.
see here: Understanding White Balance

My conclusions...
After doing alot of investigations i got to these conclusions:
Using DAYLIGHT WB means you get on the computer screen the same color chroma as you see it with your own eyes for real. This means street lights will remain orange, tungsten lights yellow, etc....
the camera simply keeps the RGB data as is... no chroma difference.

By setting the camera to manually WB - for example: Using a peace of white paper to calibrate WB under orange street light at night, will make the peace of paper look white, as it was observed in daylight (altough our eyes see it as orange in reality at the time of photographing), while other natural lights, like clouds under moonshine, will get artificial blueish shift. And that's what i DIDN'T wanted to happen :)

I want to see everything on the computer as i saw it exacly in reality. If that paper of white car had a yellowish look, it should be kept that way for me. That's how my eyes saw it... I can never get better results of a night image showing city lights from far (with, or without moonshine) without applying daylight WB!
(Using AWB or any other method of manual evaluation might shift the beautiful dominant orange lights to artificial color)

Don't forget, that our eyes evoluted to the chroma of the daylight. So by using daylight, and only daylight, you can keep the original colors (and this means white papers become orange under orange light).

I know that WB (other then daylight WB) should be applied to make white stuff look white as they were illuminated by daylight. This usful for me when taking indoor portrait shots of people under yellow tungsten light, so their faces would be looked as i was taking them under daylight.
« Last Edit: 27 / April / 2008, 15:44:59 by thunderstorm »

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Offline wontolla

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Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #15 on: 28 / April / 2008, 06:35:16 »
Quote
I want to see everything on the computer as i saw it exacly in reality.

For that, you need to calibrate your monitor too! If you have the money, get a spider.

Re: Questions about "RAW develop" function
« Reply #16 on: 05 / May / 2008, 20:17:08 »
Hi,

The fact that the raw develop uses the current camera settings can sometimes be used to your advantage.  If you have a A720IS or other powershot with ISO 1600 You can use that setting to get +1 ev development of your previously shot raws.  See my post:
in-camera EV+1
Jon

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Offline PS

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« Reply #17 on: 06 / May / 2008, 14:21:06 »
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« Last Edit: 31 / January / 2011, 20:37:21 by PS »

 

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