Re: Using a 113 gray standard in digital photo
Re: Using a 113 gray standard in digital photo
- Subject: Re: Using a 113 gray standard in digital photo
- From: email@hidden
- Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2000 20:35:16 EST
In a message dated 12/27/00 3:06:08 PM, email@hidden writes:
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Absolutely, I didn't mean to suggest that the bracket should always be
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pinned to the edges of the histogram. I just meant it would be a useful
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kind of feedback to have when you're setting exposure. Wouldn't that be
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cool? You look though the lens and there's a little bar histogram with
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say 64 steps that updates as you swing the lens around, and to the side
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two tick marks indicating the brightest bright and the darkest dark
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capable of being registered on your film or CCD, and the tick marks
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shift as you change exposure time, f stop and film speed. It'd have to
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be dependant on film stock too.
Gee, you should try the new Olympus E-10. You'd like the histrogram feature,
the variable white point options, and especially the high bit capture
settings that allow you to choose the white point within the image, or use
the selected or metered white point from the camera settings, or move it
unadjusted into Photoshop as a 16 bit file, and adjust it there.
C. David Tobie
Design Cooperative
email@hidden