Desmolicious wrote:
Excellent! Did you change the image profile in camera?
Thanks! I used the Standard filter and then edited with Snapseed on my phone. Some photos turned out pretty good SOOC but I just edited them all for some consistency.
genjy wrote:
Thanks! I used the Standard filter and then edited with Snapseed on my phone. Some photos turned out pretty good SOOC but I just edited them all for some consistency.
yeah, that's what I thought as the colours etc look much better in these than in the ones where you used the Vintage which I think is the preset/default.
I also edit mine because why not? I edit all my pics whether film or digital.
Desmolicious wrote:
yeah, that's what I thought as the colours etc look much better in these than in the ones where you used the Vintage which I think is the preset/default.
I also edit mine because why not? I edit all my pics whether film or digital.
Yeah, it's not a lot of adjustments. Some basic things like WB, curves, and grain. I edit all of my scanned film as well.
I am trying to get these CS images looking closer to my film stuff (grainy, noisy, and lo-fi).
AdaptedLenses wrote:
Y’all have made me irrationally want one of these. Anyone get tired of theirs yet and care to sell it?
It really is irrational. It's like a "full circle" camera that when you are tired of using super serious advanced tech and just want to shoot bad pictures for fun like when you first started.
madNbad wrote:
Did you change the profile? The skies look great in some and blank in others. The colors are looking better, too.
I changed the profile a little while back to 'standard' which of course shows as 'CUST' (for custom) when you boot up the camera.
The default that it ships w is the Vintage profile which I really don't like. Gives everything unpleasant sepia/green tones and blows the whites and highlights much more than the Standard.
How the skies look is just what the camera does to them, position of the camera to the light source etc.
So, the doods programming the “Vintage” profile must think everyone in the 70s and 80s had their film processed at a cr@p one hour place and stored them in a open box by a south window.