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Originally Posted by Elizabeth Schott
The lens white balance attachment does sound pretty neat, but once you get your white balance (I am just referring to digital photos) what do you do with it?
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Depending on your camera's capabilities, you can either use it to set your camera's white balance or as a reference in an image manipulation software like Photoshop. If you go to Expodisc's website they have suggestions for using their device with many different digital cameras.
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Are you shooting in a "Raw" format and changing your images in PhotoShop based on the reading, or do you set it to the highest resolution and bracket in the balance suggested? I am assuming the Nikon is a bit like the Canon and has standard balance formats you adjust manually.
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I always shoot in Raw format at the highest resolution but I set the white balance first. My camera can't bracket white balance in Raw, just in Jpeg. As I stated in another thread, I can also place a gray card in my picture and fine tune it with the Nikon software. Then I can upload this adjusted picture back to my camera and use this to set a custom white balance.
I don't know a lot about your Canon, but it's my understanding that it is not as fully featured as the Nikon D70.
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I know you also painstakingly calibrate your monitor, have you found any deviation with this, or checked the images on another computer?
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Every monitor is different. You can get things close but for me the bottom line is having my prints match whatever it is I'm shooting. In that regard I've been extremely pleased with my camera and my printer, the Epson R800. You have to surrender to the fact RGB on a monitor and ink on paper can never really look exactly the same. Images used for the web should be saved with an sRGB icc profile.
Hope this helped.