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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5100
Rules of composition & first shots = Disaster
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<blockquote data-quote="sidewinder1009" data-source="post: 61627" data-attributes="member: 9785"><p>I discovered after a little while that images uploaded or sent to other devices that I had exported from lightroom were seriously under saturated.</p><p>After a lot of searching on the internet I discovered it was because some devices and websites are not compatible with AdobeProRGB, after selecting sRGB the problem was solved. (I shoot raw because 24bit files have more room for adjusting)</p><p></p><p>I don't know if this is the colour cast you are experiencing but it was a source of frustration for me for about a week (the week I had off work on rest after night shifts so I had way too much time to take pictures)</p><p></p><p>Other than that the problem will most probably be white balance on colour casts, if the image had white in it, it should be white(if lit by the same source as the subject) not tinted blue or orange (unless capturing the colour cast on purpose) your eyes will automatically adjust to changing white balance so if it looks wrong on the screen the white balance is wrong.</p><p></p><p>If the white is grey or 'too' white then it is under or over exposed respectively (this can be caused by the colours in the image or accidentally dialling in under or over exposure)</p><p></p><p>I tried to shorten this but and still cover all my ideas without over complicating things, I'll respond to any questions I can help with.</p><p></p><p>Oliver</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="sidewinder1009, post: 61627, member: 9785"] I discovered after a little while that images uploaded or sent to other devices that I had exported from lightroom were seriously under saturated. After a lot of searching on the internet I discovered it was because some devices and websites are not compatible with AdobeProRGB, after selecting sRGB the problem was solved. (I shoot raw because 24bit files have more room for adjusting) I don't know if this is the colour cast you are experiencing but it was a source of frustration for me for about a week (the week I had off work on rest after night shifts so I had way too much time to take pictures) Other than that the problem will most probably be white balance on colour casts, if the image had white in it, it should be white(if lit by the same source as the subject) not tinted blue or orange (unless capturing the colour cast on purpose) your eyes will automatically adjust to changing white balance so if it looks wrong on the screen the white balance is wrong. If the white is grey or 'too' white then it is under or over exposed respectively (this can be caused by the colours in the image or accidentally dialling in under or over exposure) I tried to shorten this but and still cover all my ideas without over complicating things, I'll respond to any questions I can help with. Oliver [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5100
Rules of composition & first shots = Disaster
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