22.05.2005, 14:05
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#39
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Themenersteller
Registriert seit: 22.10.2004
Ort: Waiblingen
Beiträge: 381
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Zitat:
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Zitat von minomax
RawDeal installiert und nach 1 Std. wieder deinstalliert:
liefert nur dunkle Bilder, in Abhängigkeit von der gewählten Vergrößerung falsche Farben, z.B. obere Hälfte grün, untere Hälfte blau.
Nur der DiVi liefert die besten Ergebnisse!
Gruß
minomax
P.S. Alle anderen Programme auf meinem XP-Notebook laufen problemlos!
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Hast du die Profile der A2 eingebettet?? Bei mir liefert er deutlich bessere Ergebnisse wie Rawshooter oder auch DimageViewer(da ist er vor allem schneller)
Ich finde das Teil genial.
Zitat:
Auzug aus dem Handbuch:
Selecting ICC Profile for Contrast
RAW Deal is capable of using contrast curves stored in ICC profiles, which greatly
improve the final output. The program has been geared towards the ICC profiles supplied
by Minolta with DIVU, but you may be able to use some other profiles as well, provided
that they supply the required information. You will have to source the profiles yourself,
as I have no rights to distribute them.
Typically the ICC files are installed into Spool\Drivers\Color subdirectory of your system
folder, which in most cases will be C:\winnt\system32. The file I use for DiMAGE 7 is
called DiMAGE 7_rprof.icc. For a different camera model you should be looking for a file
beginning with your camera name, followed by _rprof.icc. You can experiment with other
profiles – some of them may give you very interesting effects.
To select a profile, go to the Options menu and pick the ICC Profile item. It will open a
dialog box where you can type in the file name or navigate to it using the […] button.
Once a file has been selected, the black box on the left will display a graph of the
contrast curve. You can use it at full strength or flatten it using the Amplification slider
(this is equivalent to setting Contrast in the White Balance dialog). If you leave the File
Name box empty, the contrast will be applied at straight line, as in the older versions of
the program. The same effect can be achieved by setting Amplification to 0.
Defining Color Space Conversions
Images are captured in the camera’s color space. In order to display the colors correctly
on your target device, we have to change the image color characteristics of the image.
To do so, we have to specify two things:
- the color characteristic of the camera
- the color characteristic of the target device
A dialog box available through Options/Color Space Conversion menu or by pressing
Ctrl+C is provided to define the ICC profiles of these devices. Typically as a “Camera
Profile” you will use one of the files that came with your camera.
For the “Camera Profile” there are two scenarios that work pretty well (the XXX stands
for your camera model):
- use the XXX_rprof.icc file and set the Gamma to 1.0
- use the XXX.icc file and set the Gamma to 2.0 – 2.2
For my DiMAGE 7 I use the MLTDiM7.iccfile with Gamma = 2.0
The “Output Profile” should point to an ICC or ICM file defining the color space you want
to work with.
If you output JPEG or BMP files, you probably want a sRGB color space which is standard
for Windows. On most Windows installations the necessary file can be found in
\winnt\system32\spool\drivers\color directory of your system drive.
Those who produce PSD or TIFF images and then further process them in other
applications like Adobe Photoshop, may want to use wider color spaces like Adobe RGB
instead of sRGB. The relevant profiles can be found in the same directory.
The “Perform Color Space Conversions” checkbox is there to allow you disabling the
conversions if they are undesirable for some reason, without having to re-input the
profile data. If the conversions are disabled here, the preview will also have this option
disabled.
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Das Leben ist schön!
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