Pointcolville Posted April 5, 2007 Share #1 Â Posted April 5, 2007 Advertisement (gone after registration) Yes, I realize this is overexposed. However, it was one of the first pictures I took with my new M8 and was an eye-opener for me, making me realize that 1) my daughter looks nice in magenta (I should really get her a magenta sweater), and 2) black Catholic school uniform sweaters are made of synthetics. The first is processed with the C1 generic M8 profile, and the second is with "leica_m8_jhr_v1." I downloaded here. Thanks for all the work that went into the profile. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted April 5, 2007 Posted April 5, 2007 Hi Pointcolville, Take a look here Color profile example - black sweater. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
fotografr Posted April 5, 2007 Share #2 Â Posted April 5, 2007 You also lost some color in the background. Cute kid, by the way. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jamie Roberts Posted April 5, 2007 Share #3 Â Posted April 5, 2007 Hey--when it works, it works Glad it worked for you. Â As for the loss of green in the background, the profile you used is very low on saturation and balanced towards skin tones. If you want that green back, just use the hi-sat variant and crank the saturation slider in C1. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
isaac Posted April 6, 2007 Share #4 Â Posted April 6, 2007 Hello! 2) black Catholic school uniform sweaters are made of synthetics. It is NOT a matter of the fabric, it is the dye! I have a BLACK colored COTTON trousers, which will be bright magenta without IR cut filter. And it is dark magenta black with an 'out of the box' EOS 5D.... I own a Sony DAT-recorder which normaly looks black. Not so with M8 without IR cut filter. The case looks BRIGHT magenta too. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest stnami Posted April 6, 2007 Share #5  Posted April 6, 2007 ............. a black dye is usually a comination of other stuff:D http://www.primitiveways.com/black_dye.html  http://cunnan.sca.org.au/wiki/Black_dye Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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