Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/11/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]B. D. Colen said the following on 11/3/2003 1:22 PM: > Most digicams with a bw mode achieve it by simply doing a 'forced dump' > of the color information...from rgb to gray scale. That's what Photoshop > does if you go to Image - Mode - and convert...it cuts the file size by > about 2/3 throwing out the color info...And the resulting image does not > look like "real" black and white....But it is possible to use the > channel mixer in Photoshop to make an RGB file look like bw..there are > some commercially available actions that do this extremely... ... > > I hope that explanation is clearer..... I am still not getting it. My Canon G3 also produces an RGB image if I use the B/W when I load it into Photoshop. If I load a B/W image from the Canon and switch it to Greyscale using Image>Mode, it does not change its appearance, but the histogram changes and the document size get reduced to a third of what it was, as you said. What I do not understand is if I am losing information. In RGB mode, R=G=B for all points - that is why it is gray. In greyscale mode, is it still 8 bits/pixel, or 24? I assume 8, because it does get smaller. What information is being lost? I do usually use the channel mixer to go to B/W, because I can play with the balance after the fact -- one can change filters after the exposure, a luxury we did not have with film. I have never used the commercial actions, because I do not want to superimpose artificial film grain over natural digital noise :-) I am not sure what you mean By a "forced dump". I assumed that convert to greyscale used the L of Lab, or the L of HSL. So, I did a search, and found http://www.neuro.sfc.keio.ac.jp/~aly/polygon/info/color-space-faq.html (which I have read, but do not claim to understand completely) has some interesting recommendations about how to convert to gray scale: "You can convert your picture instantaneously in gray scale pictures see even in a black and white pictures as a magician. To do so, you just need to convert your RGB values into the Y component. Actually, Y is linked to the luminosity (Y is an achromatic component) and X and Z are linked to the colorfulness (X and Z are two chromatic components). Old softwares used Rec 601-1 and produced: Gray scale=Y=(299*Red+587*Green+114*Blue)/1000 With Rec 709, we have: Gray scale=Y=(213*Red+715*Green+72*Blue)/1000 Some others do as if: Gray scale=Green (They don't consider the red and blue components at all) Or Gray scale=(Red+Green+Blue)/3 But now all people *should* use the most accurate, it means ITU standard: Gray scale=Y=(222*Red+707*Green+71*Blue)/1000 (That's very close to Rec 709!) I made some personal tests and have sorted them in regard with the global resulting luminosity of the picture (from my eye point of view!). The following summary gives what I found ordered increasingly: +-----------------------------+----------------+ |Scheme |Luminosity level| +-----------------------------+----------------+ |Gray=Green | 1 | |Gray=ITU (D65) | 2 | |Gray=Rec 709 (D65) | 3 | |Gray=Rec 601-1 (C illuminant)| 4 | |Gray=(Red+Green+Blue)/3 | 5 | +-----------------------------+----------------+ So softwares with Gray=Rec 709 (D65) produce a more dark picture than with Gray=Green. Even if you theorically lose many details with Gray=Green scheme, in fact, and with the 64-gray levels of a VGA card of a PC it is hard to distinguish the losts." Yes -- I do not know if B/W is spelled grey or gray -- that's what happens when you are an immigrant. - -- Clive http://clive.moss.net - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html