Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/05/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I have now read all of the mails posted...I am going to attempt to telescope my replies into one. Firstly thanks as ever for being a wonderful resource. I should have added that I was doing it all in a hurry, as I had been told that they were being shipped mid-next week, in the event they shipped out on Friday - less than 24 hours after I finished working. Don't ask about that one!! I should also have said that the aim was to produce a reference CD not actually print from them. Having been brought up with colour rendition in art books as a major subject of contention. My father worked in the print industry for some forty years to support us. As a result I was aware of the difference between image, film and print quality, but interested by the difficulty the D1 has in areas which I thought would have been addressed. [My father always contended that the best pictures of paintings were in B&W; that way you could see the structure of the painting] WB? - sorry but a D1 doesn't have any. Groan! Colour card? - yes probably the way I should have gone, but time precluded me from doing so see above. Lighting levels? not that constant. We were using daylight away from mid-day to try and maintain a reasonable level of natural light, but colour variation and light variation was certainly causing problems; though not the sort that I was talking about. Were the pigments metamerismic? Don't know honestly. The issue here seems to be one of colour rendition. The lighting was fairly constant. Focus? I tried the pictures in question twice, because I presumed that it was not me and I have come to the conclusion that it might be a quantisation effect. What we are talking about here is something akin to clouds of colours merging, with not a large tonal range between them, but adequate for resolution by eye at the "film plane". Thanks again for all your help. Peter Jonathan Borden wrote: > > Peter Dzwig wrote: > >> Dear All, >> >> I have just spent a few days photographing and recording some of my >> late father's paintings before they were sent on semi-permanent loan >> to the University of Torun in Poland. >> >> I decided for fairly obvious reasons to use my D-1 to take digital >> images of the 70-odd paintings which have been shipped. I was >> horrified at the variation in colour between the painting itself, what >> I saw on the screen and what I actually got on the SD card. Of course >> I am aware that my eye and the camera don't have the same response >> characteristics; but interestingly I could do little to get the camera >> to come close... >> >> Is this my D-1, is it common or is there some reasonable explanation? > > > Don't be at all surprised. This will *always* be the case whenever you > attempt to accurately reproduce colors by digital or film or any other > technique. > > You must use a profiled workflow. What you can do is take a shot of an > IT8 target with your camera. This will allow you to get an ICC profile > for the particular lighting environment w.r.t your camera (you want to > use RAW images). > > You need to profile your monitor, printer, inks and paper. > > When done you will get *more* accurate colors, assuming the gamut of > your imaging system is adequate to capture the gamut of the paints. > > For example, the gamut of Ektachrome is larger than the gamut of any > printing technique -- particularly with bright yellows as I recall. > > >> >> Further, my father painted largely abstract works (you might describe >> him as an abstract expressionist, but it's not particularly accurate). >> On those where the boundaries between areas of colour were not >> distinct the camera appeared to have difficulty in producing a sharp >> image. The opposite being true where there were strong boundaries. I >> am coming to the conclusion that the image-reconstruction algorithms >> taking the output from the chip and building the resultant image in >> memory must have been fooled. Any thoughts?? >> > > Perhaps the images are not in focus? Also this is where you really need > hi-bit e.g. 16 bits/channel images. Very subtle changes in color can get > quantized away with 8 bits/channel. > > Accurate reproduction is harder than you might initially consider. > > Jonathan > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information > >