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Thread: washed out photos always having to colour correct

  1. #1
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    washed out photos always having to colour correct

    Hey guys

    So I have a question for the experienced

    I have recently noticed that a lot of photo's I have been taking lately are quite washed out of colour.

    I'm trying to figure out why!

    the lens I have on is my 70-200ED

    and yes I did have it at full lense however I also have shots on closest i can take it. the sun was quite bright today but did have the sun behind me...

    I have just noticed that a lot of my pictures are coming out very flatt and washed out. I dont recall it always being like this

    could it be my camera needs a service, I dont think its my lens or could it be?

    or could it be something else like settings or my SD card perhaps.

    OR is it my monitor on my computer?

    This is the photo before any real tweaking was done yes it is a 1:1 crop and yes the photo was taken at a distance but like I said I have a close up photo of a flower that is as equally washed out



    and this is my colour boosted one...



    its almost like every photo I take I have to boost the black which takes away that white haze of the photo like I have been photographing next to a smokey fire.
    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




  2. #2
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    Take a selection of your 'average' pics, - like Fido here - to a Quality printer and get some larger prints made. Expect to pay lots of dollars for each one.
    Then, a day or so later, take your enhanced versions down to the same place for the same-sze prints. Compare. Ask for their comments.

    You may find that your monitor needs adjustment or replacement.

    Sorry to be the bearer of bad news !

    On my $300 ACER LCD monitor, the original dog looks more realistic, the brightened one looks like a refugee from "National Geographic" magazine. (Over the top brightness and artificially black shadow areas, suitable for the American taste...)
    Cheers

    James

  3. #3
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    What are your settings in the camera, vivid?
    Which software are you using to PP the nef files?
    Have your D80 Image enhancement options like the D200?
    If yes, is in auto?
    Have it Tone compensation like the D200?
    If yes, is in auto?

  4. #4
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    Here's your washed out pic of your hound, run through "Auto levels" in Photoshop.
    - I would'nt want to see it any brighter or saturated than this (on my monitor and for my tastes...)

    What do you think ?

    Olden-Days James...
    Attached Images Attached Images

  5. #5
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    That still looks very washed out just not as flatt as my original. on my computer

    perhaps it is my monitor that needs calibrating.

    Chucaro

    My D80

    Optimized image = normal
    image quality = Raw
    White balance = auto
    iso = 100
    tone = auto
    Sharpness = auto
    colour/hue = mode1a, 0 what ever the hell that means

    Picture taken in Aperture priority

    processed by lightroom3 64x


    to look at the picture on the camera itself it looks fine...but when I get it on comp it looks washed out.

    this laptop is 12months old so hopefully if it is the screen it just needs adjusting.

    and even on the histogram all the RGB's are through the central collumns and looks like it should be a well balanced photo in terms of colour etc.

    The photo was taken at f4 at 200mm and 1/200sec so again this should of been ok I think.

    Maybe I need to purchase capture NX or something like that to see if there is a difference. I'm still waiting on my new computer arrival so will have to save up to get a monitor calibrator as well I guess
    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




  6. #6
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    how weird

    I just relooked back at this thread and I totally agree with you superquag!!!

    the top picture does look far more natural and doesn't appear that washed out either now!!

    I can't really explain it other than I'm now looking at my laptop in the lounge room under incandescent lighting rather than in my kitchen earlier in bright natural lighting...

    could it be the way my screen is its got that kind of shiney reflective type look to it (if that makes sense)? why would those pictures look so different to me at different times of the day????

    Still I have solved the picture problem is the short term I took the colour out

    to me the picture works better in black and white anyway

    Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......




  7. #7
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    Dullbird, post processing your images in a laptop is a no-no
    You do not need to invest in a top monitor my suggestion is to get a Samsung to plug in your LT.
    I have a cheap Samsung SyncMaster 940n and my images need very little adjustment on the Pro monitors before printing.
    The only adjustment is that some time my images are a tad dark but this can be because I like dark images and alsio my eyes.
    If you do not use Nikon Capture to PP your nef files then the parameters selected in your D80 are ignored by the third party software.
    I believe that PSCS5 is OK but I have not tested it.

    Love the dog I am suffering the withdrawls since we lost Clara and I think that in our next house we will have another one.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Chucaro View Post
    <snip> post processing your images in a laptop is a no-no</snip>
    Hi Chucaro, does this recommendation stand if the laptop monitor is calibrated? I have a Spider 3 calibrating watsit, and the calibration makes quite a difference. With the monitor uncalibrated my photos look washed out, with poor contrast, but they are much better with the calibration on. However I find my photos look even better on my Plasma TV....

    Sorry to hijack your thread DB

    Cheers,

    Tim

  9. #9
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    YESSS,,, B&W rules !!!

    Laptop ??? No wonder things don't look right! - As you've found, ambient light has a big(er) influence on the colour rendition, the cheaper the screen the more it changes.

    Monitor calibration is the thing you need, and as Chucaro points out, spending the Greek National Debt is not required to get something better than most laptops!

    My own preference for rendition is top-end CRT (Old fashioned 'glass' ) screens, but realistically they're few and far between 2nd hand, and non-existant new. Sadly, my new computer's video card does'nt like my glass screen.

    Aim for the absolute minimum of post-processing. Or should I be blunt and call it 'manipulation'. of what should'nt be there...or trying to add what is'nt.

    Try and get the original image as close to perfect as possible going IN to the camera, even if it means studying the handbook cover to cover.


    James in Gosnells,
    Retired Graphics / Pre-Press Technician

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by TimNZ View Post
    Hi Chucaro, does this recommendation stand if the laptop monitor is calibrated? I have a Spider 3 calibrating watsit, and the calibration makes quite a difference. With the monitor uncalibrated my photos look washed out, with poor contrast, but they are much better with the calibration on. However I find my photos look even better on my Plasma TV....

    Sorry to hijack your thread DB

    Cheers,

    Tim
    Spyder is my recommendation too, though a half-way decent screen is needed to begin with. (My personal bias here...)

    Besides, its not a watsit, - its a 'Gizmo'

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