
tessag
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Everything posted by tessag
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I did calibrate again and I can live with this result. I have to go to bed shortly but I'm going to pop a few things into the wb check side really quick
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Oh and there is also Gain and Offset, both of which just have RGB. These ones above haven't done anything to the arrows
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Ok - doing it now. Haven't done this one yet
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Ugh I didn't save it and can't figure out how to view it again Yes - definitely
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Correct - except for the lady in the chair.
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Yes - some are better than others for sure! The whites are the worst - which is concerning because I shoot a lot of newborns and babies on white!
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Both of them were really magenta, a tad cold. Or maybe just cold, F at this point I don't even know. The 5000 pulled a bit of the magenta out but not much. I don't know if this photo does it any sort of justice?
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I should also mention that the uniformity portion to get these numbers was a little different for me than what was shown on the tutorial, it would flash white, med grey, dark grey and then give me 3 numbers (where yours only had 1). I used the top number with the highest luminance. The 3 numbers were not wildly different though, within a couple hundred of each other at most. Yes - I started with 5500, then tried 5000
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It is as close as it is going to get
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Can i please have access to part 2 of the raw class? This is something I genuinely am seeking help with, I’m not sure why I signed up for mentoring if you aren’t willing to help further?
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Cool. Thanks for it
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There is not much artificial light in that room- there’s one ceiling light far away from the windows.
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? not today, no. And there’s really not much light in that room and it’s well away from the door/windows
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Didn’t do that
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Yes. And I’m working on my external too but had to step out.. 2 runs with it so far and both too magenta
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Going with Black river (for now anyway). their prints were sharper and looked better to me and they offer what I need. I went and bought 8 of those 5000K flourescent bulbs, cussed for an hour getting them in until I watched a youtube video showing the "trick" to get them in. Still not sure the light temperature it is right?? But see below and tell me what you think Now I'm sitting in my studio, lights off of course, close to my door with a full panel window, and it's a beautiful, slightly overcast day. So I would consider where I am sitting "daylight". I'm just going to list out what I'm seeing with different calibration settings In my studio/true daylight Native/100 - Screen is too cool compared to prints. Brightness looks good comparatively D65/90 - Screen is still too cool, but better than above. D55/100 - screen is a smidge more magenta/cooler than the prints D50/90 - best of the 4, screen a smidge too magenta and probably needs to be 100 vs 90 (also did Daylight 5000/100 - almost identical to this) In my office, no windows, 8, 40 watt fluorescent bulbs, 5000K Native/100 - too cool. D65/90 - too cool D55/100 - same D50/90 - same So - after doing this in both rooms - it seems that the lighting in my office is very close to daylight (as long as where I was sitting was considered daylight??) My studio has all white walls, shouldn't have been any cast coming off the light. HELP. please. I NEED to get this mf-er calibrated so I can carry on lol. Is there some magic setting that I'm missing? I've made sure that automatic brightness is unchecked in system preferences, that the contrast is normal in accessibility (both per xrite's troubleshooting for mac). I've gone to every reasonable effort to make sure that my light is good. Am I being too picky?
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hahahaha - i freaking knew you were going to say that lol. ok so top is black river imaging, right is bay photo. How in the hell do you choose??? Do you find a certain lab that people consistently are happy with? I do a good bit of fine art/cotton rag prints, too
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And it also isn't helping that all 3 labs are slightly different, too. Miller's, bottom left, is where I normally print. Literally pulling my hair out
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ok. So - does the 7150 white point that I got with native/100 luminance mean anything? Isn't the white point normally closer to 6500?
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