Re: I suspect the original art pigments along with the 1Ds Mark II sensor is part of the issue. What do you think?
Re: I suspect the original art pigments along with the 1Ds Mark II sensor is part of the issue. What do you think?
- Subject: Re: I suspect the original art pigments along with the 1Ds Mark II sensor is part of the issue. What do you think?
- From: Hal Hinderliter <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 09 May 2012 19:25:41 -0500
Lots of good advice on this, but let me add one more thing: beige is a notoriously difficult color to reproduce. When I was at GATF, Dr. Tony Stanton had a stack of litho press sheets with a beige square. All the sheets measured the same with a colorimeter but all were visually different. (A spectro would have been better, of course.)
My point is that you might be having problems with your entire profile, which are first evident in the sand (beige) tones. Try making sure your 3-color gray patches on your target are resulting in neutral values in your scan data, rather than focusing just on deltaE.
Hal
Sent from my iPhone
On May 8, 2012, at 2:49 PM, "Millers' Photography L.L.C." <email@hidden> wrote:
> Addendum
>
> All other original art I image and reproduce, reproduce fine. Never 100% perfect, and the clients always are aware of this.
>
> David B. Miller, Pharm. D. member
> Millers' Photography L.L.C.
> 3809 Alabama Street
> Bellingham, WA 98226
> 360 739 2826
> email@hidden
> Sent from my MacBook Pro
>
>
>
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