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I did this short test after I got my 486 filter. All the black fabrics turned brown except for the fabric on the seat itself:
IR contamination of Sony EX1 on Vimeo dave |
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I followed that test a day later when I took the tripod bag outside in the sun and it turned brown in daylight as well. The 486 cleared it up okay, but you still have to adjust out that slight green tint, too.
"It's a feature, not a bug!" |
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But look at the skin tone. I took a still from your video and analyzed it in PSD with eyedropper, 1st image. And then I used Eyedropper points to white balance by numbers only in the Highlights, second image. You will notice the skin tones are also much better when numbers balance. It is really hard to mix Tungsten and Daylight, in a situation where you don't control lighting this is almost impossible. Where do you put white card. I sometimes find as little as 3' makes a huge difference. The only way to fix this stuff is in post Color or similar. I just played with image in PSD, the numbers are interesting though. I used technique I use for stills scans or digital photos. Pick 3 points and adjust color balance until numbers check out even. In this shot I would probably also desaturate a bit. Some of it is also a little blown out. I know you could make it look really good in Color. Look at the adjustment numbers they give you a good indication of where problems lie. Mostly not much blue. |
olaf
you got the suit grey but I liked the flesh tones of the brown jacket shot MUCH better |
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I think the skin tone in the corrected shot is truer (maybe not nicer), when you wear a blue shirt. The shadow under your chin will be bluish. And the backdrop was blue, this would produce a bit of blue spill around the edges of face, and hands. If you really color corrected this shot you could apply secondaries to any number of different elements or colors to achieve any "look" you want even warm skin tones and true blacks and grays. The main point I was making is you cant judge a shot that has improper white balance, and blame it on your camera. You can it fix in post, when it is not possible to set properly when shooting (always the best option). |
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