cwphoto
Newbie
Posts: 2
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« on: December 19, 2018, 03:26:09 AM » |
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Hi folks:
I'm involved in fine art reproduction and picture framing. Have been doing this for the past 26 years. My camera for about the last eight or nine years was a better light. I guess technically a scanning back. It was very easy to shoot a RAW or unaltered file and then apply a custom-made ICC profile in Photoshop. The software that came with the better light also allowed you to neutralize or otherwise select a white balance.
What I typically did was to put an an extremely accurate/neutral gray card in the scene, which I could use to neutralize the light falling on the artwork. This accounted for any variations in my light. I'm always using the same lighting equipment, same lens, same environment, etc.
I also have several high-end versions of ICC creating software. Monaco's profiler is one of my favorites for printers, but also use an older version of Binuscan for digital camera profiles. This program actually allows you to measure the target with your own spectrophotometer, so you're not using some generic batch file for the values. And of course using a spectrophotometer ensures the highest quality results. Way better than scanner based profiling solutions.
I'm interested in the most accurate color profile I can make. My customers expect nothing less. Last year I sold off the better light as it was getting pretty dated (SSCI interface) and Michael Collette, the inventor retired. I figured it was time to get into something a little more modern.
I'm now using the Canon 5DsR. Despite being a little less resolution, it's far faster, and actually has better resolution at the edges due to superior optics. Overall I love the camera.
I've been shooting in RAW mode, and start out with the same gray card to neutralize my light falling on the artwork. I tried various McBeth charts to control the contrast and create custom recipes to get the initial RAW file as close as possible, and then I applied this to my profile target, and made an ICC profile. This would later be used in Adobe Photoshop via the 'assign profile" command.
The first few profiles I created were outstanding, and color accuracy was quite good. Problem is I don't think the camera stays consistent in its capture or the software is changing things from one session to the next. I'm using canons digital photo professional version 4. And I typically choose a faithful rendition. This software will actually embed and ICC profile when you convert the file. That was okay by me as long as it was consistent. It appears it is not.
I tried just capturing the raw data and turning off the "embed ICC profile" and then created a custom ICC profile from the RAW, supposedly unmodified data. Results look less than stellar. Something is happening in the software I cannot control.
I know my ICC profile creation software works well. I've used it for many years. As long as the converter is consistent, and doesn't alter my raw data, it should work fine.
For the life of me I just can't seem to get a workflow where the camera software is not messing with the data! I don't want to invest in super high-end software just to convert my raw data into a TIFF file.
With a good quality ICC profile, I normally don't have to do much other than adjust the white and black point. Sometimes I tweak things for special-effects, but the whole point of a good quality ICC profile is accurate color.
Is there anyone out there who can offer a suggestion to a workflow that will allow me to create my own ICC profiles, without investing thousands of dollars in yet more software I feel I don't need. I just basically need a non-modified file from the camera. Of course the closer it is from the beginning the better the profile will be.
Thanks!
Troy ColorWorks Custom Lab
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