![]() ![]() With either of those, your colours are consistent and accurate no matter which camera you shoot. The X-Rite ColorChecker Passport and DataColor SpyderCHECKR both solve colour issues with ease. Personally, I avoid the stock Adobe camera profiles completely in Lightroom and Adobe Camera Raw. Or you may need to switch to another profile entirely to get more accurate colours for your scene. Martin suggests that with Lightroom, you may need to switch out the camera profile from “Adobe Standard” to “Adobe Portrait” to get more pleasing skintones, for example, with certain cameras. ![]() The article goes on to talk about how Capture One and Lightroom handle those colours. Capture One does seem to do a “better” (subjective) job of getting the colour right straight out of the box. Capture One and Lightroom both treat raw files from different cameras slightly differently. The fact of the matter is that Lightroom simply applies less sharpening by default.Ĭolour is a slightly different issue. The Lightroom image appears to be much softer with slightly less contrast than the Capture One image. Indeed, the differences between the two at their default settings (middle row) is quite striking. ![]()
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