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M8, UV/IR filter, brownish, dull greens


billmary

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I have an M8 (upgraded to 8.2) using a Leica UV/IR filter on a Elmarit 35mm lens. Compared to my D Lux 4, and a friends Canon S90, the greens (grass, leaves, etc) are rather dull and a muddy brownish color. I can almost, but not quite, correct for this by shifting the temperature about 100 degrees toward blue in post processing. Anyone else with this problem? Any suggestion?

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That's the color choices Leica made . You can read lots about it: ken Rockwell struggles with it: Erwin puts rationizes it; and Leica shooters call it the leica look or adjust greens, blue, and yellow saturation and hue sliders in their DNG processor of choice (I'm using lightroom).

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Sorry, should have specified: shooting raw, processed in Apple iPhoto, lens coding and UV/IR filter set to ON, Bill

 

I join the suggestion to use another RAW processor. (I use Lightroom, and tuning the greens I admit is not rare)... btw, which 35 lens do you exactly refer to ? There is not an Elmarit 35.

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I thought the look was "natural" or "normal" until I got the D Lux 4. The D Lux 4 looks more like the actual scene. I wonder what the photographs from the X1 and the M9 look like. (By the way, my 35 mm lens is a Summarit, NOT an Elmarrt).

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I am using a UV/IR filter, Leica # 13416, according to the engraving on the filter ring.

Will try another RAW processor, either Aperture 3 or Lightroom, any suggestions?

Don't have access to LINUX (I don't think I do anyway.)

Sorry about the 35mm Summarit-M name slip up, I also have a 24 mm Elmarit-M and my pea-sized brain got the names mixed up. Thanks for all the help.

Bill

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Bill, I can only recommend Lightroom which I have used from its first launch. It is now a super programme and very versatile. You have so much flexibility to fine tune the processing of Raw files and then, save your settings as a Preset. Whenever you ingest new pictures into your library, you can choose to have that preset applied during importation. That is a real time-saver. Remember, that is not the end of processing. You can fine-tune any selected or batch of images to cater for unusual lighting etc. Just one word of warning: allow plenty of time to build up your knowledge and expertise. Read a good current book on the subject. Gradually you will establish your own bespoke work-flow and get the high standard of results you are seeking.

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...

Will try another RAW processor, either Aperture 3 or Lightroom, any suggestions?

Bill

 

Here is a discussion of Leica yellowish greens in terms of segments of the hues spectrum, with an example of working on this in Picture Window Pro (an economical but powerful program):

 

Digital Light & Color • View topic - Using hue curve to "get the green out of yellows"

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Thanks Nicoleica,

I'm not using a lens hood. I can find one at B&H for the 35mm Summicron, but not specifically for the Summarit. Do you think the Summicro hood would work on the Summarit? They are both 39mm.

Bill

 

Hi Bill,

 

The 35 Summarit takes the same hood as the 50 Summarit. This is a screw on metal hood that fits onto the lens after the protection ring is removed, not onto the filter thread. (Part #12459) The B&H reference is LELH3550M. It's a nice solid hood, works well, and it looks good too.

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Hi Bill,

 

I never had any trouble with mine. It screwed on and fitted firmly, never showing any signs of moving. Then again, I'm reasonably careful in how I treat my cameras. I suppose it would be possible to loosen it if you treated it roughly. But even if that did occur, I'm sure that a tiny spot of something like 'Loctite' would cure it. The hood is not normally something that you take on and off a lot. More a case of fit once, and keep on forever. :)

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Like Nicole, the hood on my 35 summarit has worked perfectly for me.

(for those who have noticed that I am selling it, that is because I own a 35 summilux asph with no backfocus and am raising cash for an M9)

I had a very hard time choosing which lens to sell as the summarit is nice and compact and the IQ is truly beautiful. The extra 1 1/2 stop made me decide.

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... ken Rockwell struggles with it: Erwin puts rationizes it ...

 

Gary, you neglected to mention that there are also articles on getting M8 colors from other camera brands, such as the one comparing M8 and D200 at KammaGamma, or the Lightroom presets offered at KammaGamma, enabling you to get M8 colors from the D3.

 

 

And Charles, the name of the link you posted, "Digital Light & Color &bull ...", seems quite apropos. :D

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