On Jun 28, 2006, at 6:43 AM, Kostas Kavoussanakis wrote:

> On Wed, 28 Jun 2006, Paul Stenquist wrote:
>
>> With digital, there's no such thing as "standard" settings. If you
>> jpegs, the camera processes the recorded data. If you shoot RAW, you
>> process it. In either case, you have to control the outcome either by
>> setting the camera defaults to get the right amount of saturation,
>> contrast and exposure or by making the adjustments in your RAW
>> converter. The latter method, of course, gives you more control.
>
> Is RAW accepted at Photo labs, or is it a given that we are all
> photo-finishers anymore?

Photo finishing services require a rendered RGB digital image to print.
RAW format captures are not rendered RGB digital images.

"Standard settings" is a nearly meaningless term even for film. A  
photofinishing printer starts with a default filter setup based on  
the film type, paper, chemistry, and a calibration reading of a  
standardized test strip. Those settings are modified by the operator  
to make a pleasing image at the time of printing a particular  
negative. Even with transparency film, the machine that processes the  
film must be adjusted so that the process produces an expected color  
rendering based on a calibration test.

You do the same thing with a digital image in JPEG capture by  
adjusting the camera settings. You do the same thing with a digital  
image in RAW capture by adjusting the RAW conversion parameters. If  
you want to use a set of 'standard settings', take a calibration  
control image of a known reference (like a Macbeth color chart) and  
calibrate your settings against it.

Godfrey

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