Author | Thread |
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01/20/2007 01:19:18 PM · #1 |
is Contrast/ Brightness legal in minimal editing? |
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01/20/2007 01:24:18 PM · #2 |
Originally posted by rules: You may not:
adjust brightness, contrast, curves or levels. |
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01/20/2007 01:28:38 PM · #3 |
NOTHING is legal, basically, after you have captured the image.
You download from camera, you resize, you sharpen. If necessary you rotate, but only in 90-degree increments. If you want B/W, you may achieve it by using your software's automatic, complete desaturation tool.
Basically anything you can do in-camera BEFORE making the exposure is legal; that's where you set your saturation, your sharpness, your contrast, your white balance, and so forth. If your camera supports such features as straight-to-B/W or straight-to-sepia, that's OK too.
R.
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01/20/2007 01:56:12 PM · #4 |
Originally posted by Bear_Music: NOTHING is legal, basically, after you have captured the image.
You download from camera, you resize, you sharpen. If necessary you rotate, but only in 90-degree increments. If you want B/W, you may achieve it by using your software's automatic, complete desaturation tool.
Basically anything you can do in-camera BEFORE making the exposure is legal; that's where you set your saturation, your sharpness, your contrast, your white balance, and so forth. If your camera supports such features as straight-to-B/W or straight-to-sepia, that's OK too.
R. |
and sharpen more? |
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01/20/2007 02:00:41 PM · #5 |
Originally posted by Rino63: Originally posted by Bear_Music: NOTHING is legal, basically, after you have captured the image.
You download from camera, you resize, you sharpen. If necessary you rotate, but only in 90-degree increments. If you want B/W, you may achieve it by using your software's automatic, complete desaturation tool.
Basically anything you can do in-camera BEFORE making the exposure is legal; that's where you set your saturation, your sharpness, your contrast, your white balance, and so forth. If your camera supports such features as straight-to-B/W or straight-to-sepia, that's OK too.
R. |
and sharpen more? |
There's actually a whole other thread on this where SC have been weighing in: //www.dpchallenge.com/forum.php?action=read&FORUM_THREAD_ID=530357
Probably best to seek your answers there, I am not a vested authority.
R.
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01/20/2007 02:03:33 PM · #6 |
Right -- please continue in that thread.
No, you can't use anything except "Sharpen." |
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