myotis
Suspended / Banned
- Messages
- 4,503
- Name
- Graham
- Edit My Images
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I'm not sure that this is ever the purpose of auto. it's just to get some sort of standard starting point for manual processing or to help cull imported fles. As an end point, I've never seen it give acceptable results.I think a lot of the time, I don't want my photos to look 'auto' or 'normal'
This mirrors the point I made earlier and why auto doesn’t work at all for me, even as a starting point, because it almost always destroys the tonal characteristics I have carefully, and deliberately exposed for.Quite often I shoot to intentionally over expose for a brighter and more pastel look for example. Other times it might be the opposite and I shoot for a darker moodier final image.
Again this mirrors the same point I made earlier. I have a home made import preset (style in my case because I use C1), based on a linear curve import profile, but also using a tweaked tone curve, and tweaked Contrast, saturation and brightness sliders. The auto setting in C1 is customisable and I've found that by using only the auto levels, with this import style, I get a flat but full tonal and colour range starting point, This is normally a good reflection of what I had in my mind at the time of taking the picture, and is near enough to help me with the initial cull.I also use a non standard 'profile' 95% of the time. The other 4% is another non standard profile. And the remaining 1% is 'camera light' which I like for my night sky images.
I still normally need a small tweak in the levels control to adjust contrast and exposure before making a final decision, Occasionally I need to manually switch from the import Linear profile to the standard profile if my image is much flatter than I want. it to be.
And, in my case I also convert to Black and White on import, (But can switch between colour and B/W with the "\" key.). I normally photograph with B/W in mind, but some pictures are taken because of the colours and the same import settings for B/W give me rather soft pastel ones colour images, which is easy to assess at the culling stage Often, when I get it wrong, and a picture isn't working as a B/W, it will work in colour, so being able to quickly switch between the two is useful.
As I suggested in another post, I'm not sure how much you can learn from Auto, but I feel you can learn a lot from using presets/styles through learning which combinations of settings give particular effects, and learning how you can recreate these effects for your own use.Auto can be good to learn from I guess. Much like Auto when someone buys their first decent camera. But it's good to press forward and learn new, unique things.


