![]() ![]() The camera spaces (whether ICC based camera profiles as in Capture One, or "custom" profiles as in ACR) are there to map/convert raw data into device-independent working spaces. The 2 options sRGB/aRGB in Silkypix are its working spaces and at the same time output spaces IMHO. I'm not on a Mac, so I don't have a clue about Raw Developer. I don't know about Capture One, but I suspect that it uses it's own internal working space, similar to ACR/Lightroom and LightZone. You can choose from several working spaces and the histogram reflects the current working space. Holmes, you mention C1, RawShooter and Raw Developer as RC's that work in camera spaces. They are device-dependent and they generally do not meet the requirements for working spaces that are: ![]() I really doubt that any RC works/processes in a camera space. > Because sometimes the RAW translator is in either the camera space or in its own huge Pro RGB-like color space (as it seems Aperture uses, although i'm checking). (Asher, you might want to move this thread as i'm digressing a little) I'll try and publish some images later to give an example. This is probably due to the demosaicing algorithm employed. Silkypix had neglible false outlines and much lower level of artifacts, it was also significantly smoother in colour graduation and less blocky. I took a 1Ds file and upsized at 200% and compared it against the recognised CS2 method of bicubic smooth over size (220%) and bicubic sharper reduce (200%). I do recommend that people try upsizing the output, its very impressive indeed. Its not very intuitive, but a little time spent revising the "tastes" (presets) to something more familiar would improve it. A little bit of reverse engineering is needed to understand why. If one looks inside the program folder, the two icc files are visible, i've tried adding others, but they are not recognised bu the app. The manual also states that gamma has changed to 1.15 from 1.35 for this version, this raises the brightness slightly, especially in shadow areas. It has two colourspaces, sRGB and AdobeRGB with the ability to tag the file or not.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |