Hi,
I wouldn't say god is involved in this…
In the experiments I made I found that Capture One pushes deep blues well inside Adobe RGB into well outside Adobe RGB blues. Now, most computer screens used sRGB which are based on REC 709 RGB. High end wide gamut devices are close to Adobe RGB. But neither colour space includes all colours occuring in nature, which is often referred to as Pointer's RGB.
So if colours are pushed outside Adobe RGB, colour differences will not be visible on a computer monitor.
Check the enclosed figures at the bottom of this page:
The first figure shows how colours are shifted when an IT-8 produced by chromogenic printing is reproduced by a P45+ back and interpreted in Capture One. As you can see the colours have a significant shift.
The second figure shows that the colours are pushed well outside Adobe RGB.
The third figure shows that although colour error is pretty large, about Delta E = 17, the difference is barely noticeable on screen, for the simple reason that Adobe RGB cannot correctly show the real colour.
The forth figure demonstrates that a much smaller colour error is very much visible if both the reference and sampled colour lie within the gamut visible within Adobe RGB.
Now, there is a new colour space defined for 4K called Rec 2020. It is possible that the colours produced by Capture One default processing would be visible in Rec 2020. I don't know, because I have no Rec 2020 screen.
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Another issue which may be related or not was found when I made a test looking at reproduction of greens. To a great part because I had some communication with Tim Parkin, publisher of OnLandscape. Tim indicated that he and his friend Joe Cornish had issues with colour reproduction on the P45+, with greens being pushed towards yellows. I had no communication with Joe Cornish directly but Tim said that they both found that P45+ images needed massive corrections for realistic colour. Tim and Joe also found that the later generation DALSA based backs delivered better colour.
What I wanted to find out how much that issue was related to profiles and how much related to sensor. One of the experiments I set up was a blush purple flower with green blades. I have chosen this because I knew these colours were sensitive to reproduction errors. Illumination was with Elinchrome studio flash.
Capture One gave these colours:
While other alternatives essentially yielded these colours:
Now, I measure the colours on the flower with a spectrometer and found the colours were these:
With the green blades it was a bit different, a lot more variation between samples.
So, Capture One essentially reproduced bluish purple flowers as blue. This may or may not correspond to the blue colour shift mentioned above.
I did not really come up with a clear conclusion. One thing I observed the IR content on both green and the purple flowers was very high. So the amount of IR filtering may affect colour reproduction and that may be hard to correct in processing.
Finally, if we look at colour reproduction from a Sony Alpha 99 the colour from C1 is still very blue:
While Lightroom reproduction is close to original:
Now, I am perfectly aware that the colour can be easily adjusted in the Capture One colour editor, but I feel that a good raw converter should deliver decent colours by defaults.
A more comprehensive posting is here:
http://echophoto.dnsalias.net/ekr/Articles/OLS_OnColor/SimpleCase/A draft of the article I was writing for On Landscape is here:
http://echophoto.dnsalias.net/ekr/Articles/OLS_OnColor/OnColor.pdfThe article never got published, I guess that both I and Tim run out of steam and now clear conclusion could be drawn. An interesting observation may be that Tim Parkin is also a painter. Painters work on location and try to reproduce what they see using available paints. I think that kind of viewing produces an awareness of colour that we photographers shooting in landscape and processing in the digital darkroom will not see.
Anders Torger, a frequent poster here, has developed a new tool called DCamprof which can generate both DNG profiles for Lightroom and ICC profiles for Capture One. It is described here:
http://www.ludd.ltu.se/~torger/dcamprof.html . Those pages offer a lot of insight in both profiles and interpretation of colour.
Best regards
Erik
Oh my god. Erik - I could boost global saturation of a real world image by 200% - but why should I do so?
It seems, the "Advanced Color Editor" is aimed at advanced users...
It is certainly not desinged to produce imaginary colors (altough it could/can - just as Adobe software with the huge color space ProPhoto).
Think of a certain very, very desaturated color that you want to push... maybe even by 200% ... got it?
The capabilities of a certain tool do not dictate how to use this very tool ... it's always the end-user that has to make the most out of it.
Again: the gamut of C1's input profiles is typically somewhere between Adobe-RGB and ProPhoto-RGB ... and normally there's no need to push the Advanced Color Editor to its limits. Normally you do very subtle edits (at least I do).