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Learning
Photography Q&A
How the camera creates JPEGs? and do Macbooks show JPEGs different to Windows?
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<blockquote data-quote="WayneF" data-source="post: 724424" data-attributes="member: 12496"><p>I am months too late, sorry. The initial image is a very nice image, but is shown here washed out more than necessary. A starting point now, adjusting the Photoshop <strong>Levels</strong> tool (CTRL L in Windows) in its default mode RGB (not individual channels), move middle slider to the right somewhat (maybe 0.66) to help substantially (adjust by eye, with its Preview ON). That middle slider is called a Gamma Multiplier (just meaning basically a great brightness tool, as it adds no risk of clipping either end). To the right reduces brightness ... and is a best way, far better than the old basic tool called Brightness. </p><p></p><p>But LCD monitors come from the factory set too bright, because bright helps sales. For photos, maybe add a monitor calibration tool to aid your judgement of the images.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WayneF, post: 724424, member: 12496"] I am months too late, sorry. The initial image is a very nice image, but is shown here washed out more than necessary. A starting point now, adjusting the Photoshop [B]Levels[/B] tool (CTRL L in Windows) in its default mode RGB (not individual channels), move middle slider to the right somewhat (maybe 0.66) to help substantially (adjust by eye, with its Preview ON). That middle slider is called a Gamma Multiplier (just meaning basically a great brightness tool, as it adds no risk of clipping either end). To the right reduces brightness ... and is a best way, far better than the old basic tool called Brightness. But LCD monitors come from the factory set too bright, because bright helps sales. For photos, maybe add a monitor calibration tool to aid your judgement of the images. [/QUOTE]
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Photography Q&A
How the camera creates JPEGs? and do Macbooks show JPEGs different to Windows?
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