Picture Style Untuk Canon 600d T3i

Hello everyone, so I just realized about the picture style settings in the t3i for the first time today. I was reading this online article about how shooting a flat picture style in photos or videos can help with post processing by giving you more dynamic range. I also learned about technicolor cinestyle picture profile. I installed it and saw that the settings it uses are: 0 sharpness, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, 0 color tone My question is what is the difference if I just set the custom settings to the exact cinestyle settings in camera? Hp Mini 2133 Graphics Driver Windows 7. For example, i change the 'standard' picture style to 0 sharpess, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, and 0 color tone. Is there a difference between the 2 profiles? I know that picture styles do not matter if you shoot RAW.
I was just curious about cinestyle settings vs in camera custom settings. I wrote about it here. Picture Style Canon 600d.
Canon offers a wide range of compatible supplies and accessories that can enhance your user experience with you EOS Rebel T3i Body that you can purchase direct. Scroll down to easily select items to add to your shopping cart for a faster, easier checkout.
I'm an AVID proponent of (-4) contrast as canon's standard picture style oftne result in the infamous canon white sky problem. You can read about my earlier thread here: • If you ever have the pleasure of shooting with a friend's Olympus or Nikon DSLR, you're notice these camera produce rich deep blue sky vs canon's boring white sky.
Another advantage is that (-4) also increase dynamic range and skin-tone for portraits Notice how (-4) Contrast brings out the cloud in the sky mikeh91 wrote: Hello everyone, so I just realized about the picture style settings in the t3i for the first time today. I was reading this online article about how shooting a flat picture style in photos or videos can help with post processing by giving you more dynamic range. I also learned about technicolor cinestyle picture profile. I installed it and saw that the settings it uses are: 0 sharpness, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, 0 color tone My question is what is the difference if I just set the custom settings to the exact cinestyle settings in camera?
For example, i change the 'standard' picture style to 0 sharpess, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, and 0 color tone. Is there a difference between the 2 profiles? I know that picture styles do not matter if you shoot RAW. I was just curious about cinestyle settings vs in camera custom settings. Mikeh91 wrote: Hello everyone, so I just realized about the picture style settings in the t3i for the first time today.
I was reading this online article about how shooting a flat picture style in photos or videos can help with post processing by giving you more dynamic range. I also learned about technicolor cinestyle picture profile. I installed it and saw that the settings it uses are: 0 sharpness, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, 0 color tone My question is what is the difference if I just set the custom settings to the exact cinestyle settings in camera? For example, i change the 'standard' picture style to 0 sharpess, -4 contrast, -2 saturation, and 0 color tone. Is there a difference between the 2 profiles?
I know that picture styles do not matter if you shoot RAW. I was just curious about cinestyle settings vs in camera custom settings. Copying just the in-camera slider settings will not reproduce a custom Picture Style or picture profile. Note that Neutral and Faithful have identical 0,0,0,0 slider settings, but are quite different, as are Standard, Portrait, and Landscape, which only vary with +/- 1 to the Sharpening slider. The slider adjustments are not very fine and they don't cover all the parameters that make up a Picture Style. To do it right requires the Picture Style Editor software that came with your camera.
That's an involved process. Rather than reinvent the wheel, it's far easier for most users to simply download Picture Styles someone else has created and load them to your camera, or apply them in post-processing with DPP.
Free additional Picture Styles from Canon: Free from Technicolor CyneStyle.