- #Canon digital professional tutorial full size#
- #Canon digital professional tutorial full#
- #Canon digital professional tutorial software#
This particular checkerboard pattern of sensors only captures 50% of the green light that hits it and 25% of the red and blue. In addition to those three types, manufacturers have meddled with the mixture pattern of sensors eg a common Bayer pattern has twice as many green sensors than the red or blue. Each of these capture the RGB in a different way, giving different results. If you mean that light passes through a lens and hits a CCD, then you're right.īut, the CCD could be Fuji dual, Fovean capture or Bayer Mosaic. It won't, however, make your images look softer.
#Canon digital professional tutorial software#
All a conflict of Adobe RGB or sRGB will do is affect the saturation depending on what the working space of the software you're using is, but through changing the colour it will also affect the overall contrast. It certainly isn't a colour profile or colour space problem. Once you re-size the image to something like 1024 or 1200 pixels wide, it should appear the same regardless of the program you open it in. You'll generally find if you view the original photo at 'actual pixels', or 100% then step it down in size until you can see the whole photo, it will appear sharp, then soft one size down, sharp the next size down, then soft, etc.
#Canon digital professional tutorial full#
The software shows the image full screen, but the resolutions don't match.
#Canon digital professional tutorial full size#
What size are you viewing the images? When I open a full size image from any of my 3 digital SLR's or one of my other 3 digital cameras in Photoshop, it appears soft because the pixels of the original image don't exactly match those of the screen. 15th July 2008 at 01:50 - Edited 1st January 1970 at 01:00Ĭanon S/w Canon Camera.Canon know the flaws of their camera kit and build S/w to overcome them.perhaps?Įvery digital SLR you will ever use, and I mean every digital SLR fundamentally works in exactly the same way. I then know exactly where I am and know that if I don't like a print then I know it isn't the profile(s). It could be the workspace profiles, after much messing about, I now leave all my kit and settings to the sRGB default. The default sharpening on the Canon DPP RAW CR2 viewer is set at 4 (Out of 10) and I always null that and do my own sharpening later in CS2, after I've converted the Raw to a Tiff. The basic editing functions on it are OK for snaps too.Īlso, the Canon S/w could well be sharpening the image at loading.
Try MS office Picture Manager, IMO it is the best JPEG "Quick" viewer, it has a zoom function slider and that zoom stays in place for each picture.
will also be large, in order to show the pictures faster. Canon S/w Canon Camera.Canon know the flaws of their camera kit and build S/w to overcome them.perhaps? Is it something to do with colour profiles? When I view images taken on my Canon 30D in Canon's own Digital Photo Professional application they appear sharper, crisper and generally better IQ than when viewed in windows explorer or even Photoshop.