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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7100
nikon d7100 color problem?
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<blockquote data-quote="yauman" data-source="post: 275025" data-attributes="member: 15418"><p><span style="color: #232323"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">Whenever you want to discuss color, there's not much sense to compare images taken with the camera set at auto-WB. In Auto WB, the same camera may behave very differently under different light conditions and ISO settings. When you start to compare different cameras under the same light condition but both set to auto-WB, you find that different cameras have very different WB algorithm. To really compare colors, the only way is to have the two cameras capture the same image in manual mode - same F stop, same ISO, same shutter speed and both set to the same PRESET WB in Kelvins. Then, you'll see the differences in the way the cameras process the images and comparisons of color will make sense. At our glamor/fashion photo workshops, we all shot the same models with the same studio strobe lights but Canon users were told to set their WB to 6000K and Nikon users were asked to set WB to 5850K. </span></span></p><p></p><p><span style="color: #232323"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'">Attached are two photos of a musical, one shot by my brother-in-law with a Canon 5D Mark? (full sensor) and by me with my Nikon 7100. This is one of the rare occasions that I shot with Auto-WB and so did my BIL because stage lighting is always changing an rather convoluted. His was shot at ISO3200 and mine at ISO6400. You can see the difference in the WB from the two cameras. (Both shot raw and process by Lightroom, saving to JPG sRGB at 60%) Most pros like the Canon engines better when it comes to rendering auto WB. Canon does an even more superior job if you shoot JPG as it's JPG engine is consider head and shoulder above Nikons (That's the reason you see mostly Canon shooters on the side line of sporting events - they all have to shoot JPG and Canon wins!)</span></span></p><p><span style="color: #232323"><span style="font-family: 'Verdana'"></span></span>[ATTACH]76255[/ATTACH][ATTACH]76256[/ATTACH]</p><p></p><p>If you want to see more images from the play <a href="http://yauman.smugmug.com/Events/Rent/" target="_blank">click here</a> - the lighting was a photographer's nightmare - low and colorful and changing all the time! All images were shot at ISO 6400, shutter speed from 1/30 to 1/250.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="yauman, post: 275025, member: 15418"] [COLOR=#232323][FONT=Verdana]Whenever you want to discuss color, there's not much sense to compare images taken with the camera set at auto-WB. In Auto WB, the same camera may behave very differently under different light conditions and ISO settings. When you start to compare different cameras under the same light condition but both set to auto-WB, you find that different cameras have very different WB algorithm. To really compare colors, the only way is to have the two cameras capture the same image in manual mode - same F stop, same ISO, same shutter speed and both set to the same PRESET WB in Kelvins. Then, you'll see the differences in the way the cameras process the images and comparisons of color will make sense. At our glamor/fashion photo workshops, we all shot the same models with the same studio strobe lights but Canon users were told to set their WB to 6000K and Nikon users were asked to set WB to 5850K. [/FONT][/COLOR] [COLOR=#232323][FONT=Verdana]Attached are two photos of a musical, one shot by my brother-in-law with a Canon 5D Mark? (full sensor) and by me with my Nikon 7100. This is one of the rare occasions that I shot with Auto-WB and so did my BIL because stage lighting is always changing an rather convoluted. His was shot at ISO3200 and mine at ISO6400. You can see the difference in the WB from the two cameras. (Both shot raw and process by Lightroom, saving to JPG sRGB at 60%) Most pros like the Canon engines better when it comes to rendering auto WB. Canon does an even more superior job if you shoot JPG as it's JPG engine is consider head and shoulder above Nikons (That's the reason you see mostly Canon shooters on the side line of sporting events - they all have to shoot JPG and Canon wins!) [/FONT][/COLOR][ATTACH=CONFIG]76255[/ATTACH][ATTACH=CONFIG]76256[/ATTACH] If you want to see more images from the play [URL="http://yauman.smugmug.com/Events/Rent/"]click here[/URL] - the lighting was a photographer's nightmare - low and colorful and changing all the time! All images were shot at ISO 6400, shutter speed from 1/30 to 1/250. [/QUOTE]
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nikon d7100 color problem?
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