On Sat, 3 Jun 2006 02:49:33 +0200, "Bart van der Wolf"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>Actually, after 'correcting' the per channel exposure levels, there
>still are residual incompatibilities between the R, G, and B curve
>shapes *and* intensities (saturation). Profiling potentially takes
>care of those anomalities, but it is not all that simple (even
>shooting a target object such as an 'IT8' requires skill). Having
>created a number of profiles myself, for various scanner
>illumination/sensor-sensitivity versus film dye set families myself,
>it makes arriving at a plausible baseline much easier. Then there
>still is the tone-mapping challenge to fit the film's (partially
>compressed) representation of the scene's luminances and saturations
>to the potential output media.
>
>IMHO, there's enough to 'fuss' about ;-) .
If I needed "objectively accurate" color or anything like that
then I'd shoot chromes, in a studio, with controlled lighting,
and the scanner would be profiled. (Or I'd shoot with digital
and profile the camera.)
But I don't. Need objectively accurate color, that is.
Results need to be pleasant and believable, is the
main thing. Or consistent with the mood and content
and intent of the image.
If analog gains are set right, and white/black points
set for each channel after the scan (assuming no
clipping in any channel) then usually what's left is at
most a few minutes tweaking the curves - either
the overall gamma, or per-channel.
With C41, there is no such thing as objectively
accurate color. It's impossible. Doesn't exist.
rafe b
www.terrapinphoto.com