octofish
Member
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2011
- Messages
- 28
- Format
- 35mm
Hi dpug folks,
Is anyone able to shed some light on the way the Epson scanner software works? I am trying to get the best possible results out of it for colour negs (using a 4180 scanner and windows 7) but I'm getting a bit confused about levels/curves etc.
When you do an auto-exposure, it sets the black and white points a little too aggressively, even with the soft-clipping that the output levels slider give you. What I am doing is trying to move the white point to include more of the information. I also find that auto-exposure has also set different gammas for each channel, so I normally set them all to 1.0 for all channels and then tweak the white points a bit more to get a reasonable colour balance.
What Im not getting is that sometimes the auto-exposure actually looks reasonable with these weird values. My method gets scans that tend to be a bit on the flat side, and I have to boost contrast in post. I assume that the 'soft-clipping' is trying to simulate the shoulder you would get by printing on paper so you get reasonable contrast. Are the weird gammas compensating for the curve thats introduced as a result of the highlight points being in different spots for different colours? How does this even work? Sometimes I struggle to get colour as accurate using my workflow to what auto-exp gives me even with its weird gamma values, so I want to understand what its doing and why, so I can do it myself, but better.
What I really want is to just get the most accurate results as far as whats on the film. Is my assumption that 1.0 gamma is accurate incorrect? While Im getting less cross casts than the aggressively clipped curves from auto-exposure sometimes give me, they are still present, so Im suspecting I may need to tweak the gammas a little bit at least. Im also finding that if I dont allow at least some soft-clipping of highlights, apart from it looking flat (which I can fix), I start to run into posterization issues and noise as the middle values are compressed too much.
Im really loathe to use much of the softclipped shoulder and non 1.0 gammas cause they are really tough to get right based on just eyeballing the preview without introducing all sorts of cross casts which are impossible to fix in lightroom (no proper curves tool). But I really dont want to go to doing a full linear scan followed by curve correction in photoshop as its much more labour and data intensive. What I really want is to make sensible choices about contrast and dynamic range at the scan step and have the colour be basically right, so I only need to make minor tweaks in post. Is this reasonable or am I being a big baby?
Anyone been down this road?
Sorry for the long post!
Is anyone able to shed some light on the way the Epson scanner software works? I am trying to get the best possible results out of it for colour negs (using a 4180 scanner and windows 7) but I'm getting a bit confused about levels/curves etc.
When you do an auto-exposure, it sets the black and white points a little too aggressively, even with the soft-clipping that the output levels slider give you. What I am doing is trying to move the white point to include more of the information. I also find that auto-exposure has also set different gammas for each channel, so I normally set them all to 1.0 for all channels and then tweak the white points a bit more to get a reasonable colour balance.
What Im not getting is that sometimes the auto-exposure actually looks reasonable with these weird values. My method gets scans that tend to be a bit on the flat side, and I have to boost contrast in post. I assume that the 'soft-clipping' is trying to simulate the shoulder you would get by printing on paper so you get reasonable contrast. Are the weird gammas compensating for the curve thats introduced as a result of the highlight points being in different spots for different colours? How does this even work? Sometimes I struggle to get colour as accurate using my workflow to what auto-exp gives me even with its weird gamma values, so I want to understand what its doing and why, so I can do it myself, but better.
What I really want is to just get the most accurate results as far as whats on the film. Is my assumption that 1.0 gamma is accurate incorrect? While Im getting less cross casts than the aggressively clipped curves from auto-exposure sometimes give me, they are still present, so Im suspecting I may need to tweak the gammas a little bit at least. Im also finding that if I dont allow at least some soft-clipping of highlights, apart from it looking flat (which I can fix), I start to run into posterization issues and noise as the middle values are compressed too much.
Im really loathe to use much of the softclipped shoulder and non 1.0 gammas cause they are really tough to get right based on just eyeballing the preview without introducing all sorts of cross casts which are impossible to fix in lightroom (no proper curves tool). But I really dont want to go to doing a full linear scan followed by curve correction in photoshop as its much more labour and data intensive. What I really want is to make sensible choices about contrast and dynamic range at the scan step and have the colour be basically right, so I only need to make minor tweaks in post. Is this reasonable or am I being a big baby?
Anyone been down this road?
Sorry for the long post!