i1Profiler and Digital Camera Profiling
i1Profiler and Digital Camera Profiling
- Subject: i1Profiler and Digital Camera Profiling
- From: Louis Dina <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2013 15:36:23 -0600
ColorChecker Passport does a decent job with custom camera profiles for
every day use. I prefer Adobe's free DNG Profile Editor, at least for
studio portraiture. Xrite profiles are contrastier, more saturated and a
little too reddish for my taste, at least for portraits. Colorchecker
passport is much easier to use, and it is a free utility you can download
from Xrite. But, it has no ability to tailor your results.
Adobe DNG Profile Editor takes more work, and little more experimenting,
but is incredibly flexible. I find it provides a "softer" starting point
and makes edits a lot easier and faster in LR or PS. You select a base
profile as your starting point (I prefer Camera Neutral for portrait work)
and you can edit it as desired, for more or less contrast, saturation,
color adjustment, etc.
Both of these are designed to work with Adobe Camera Raw (Bridge, PS, or
LR) and they are not ICC profiles, but recipes that the ACR program uses
during raw display and conversion.
You can create profiles for a specific use (a studio setup, specific
lighting, etc), or as Scott mentioned, "dual illuminant" profiles that
cover a wide range of lighting conditions and interpolate between Daylight
(6500K) and an Incandescent (2800K). Either of these programs gives me
better color from my digital cameras than the generic camera profiles
suppled by Adobe.
I use the DNG PE profiles for studio portraiture and softer images. I often
use the Xrite profiles for colorful scenes, nature shots, etc.
Lou Dina
> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 5
> Date: Wed, 13 Feb 2013 08:33:14 -0600
> From: Scott Martin <email@hidden>
> To: Louis Servedio-Morales <email@hidden>
> Cc: email@hidden
> Subject: Re: i1Profiler and Digital Camera Profiling
> Message-ID: <email@hidden>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
> The Colorchecker Passport is Xrite's camera profiling solution and it's a
> *DNG profiling solution* that only works with Adobe's RAW engine. Let me
> say that it's incredibly easy and the results are fantastic. The way DNG
> camera profiles scale between different light sources is brilliant.
>
> ICC camera profiles are a tricky matter that one could argue that it was
> worth giving up. While I haven't tried using i1P's scanner profiling module
> to create an ICC camera profile, I'm dubious knowing how many additional
> variables there are to camera profiling. That said, if you try it out do
> let us know how it works!
>
> Scott Martin
> http://www.on-sight.com/
> http://www.martinphoto.com/
>
>
>
> On Feb 12, 2013, at 4:26 PM, Louis Servedio-Morales <
> email@hidden> wrote:
>
> > Since i1Profiler does not include a workflow selection for making icc
> camera profiles, I was wondering if using the scanner workflow on a camera
> capture of the X-Rite ColorChecker SG be a successful move?
>
>
>
_______________________________________________
Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored.
Colorsync-users mailing list (email@hidden)
Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription:
This email sent to email@hidden