My Nikon DSLR cameras were such a pain for infrared, I gave up on them long ago. Gee, if it was't for that M8, none of this would be happening. I'm assuming I take a photo with my M8.2 using the 35 Summilux, edit it in Lightroom as best I can, and somehow save that image, and use it to create a profile. Or, after reading what you wrote, how do I create a profile. Cameras now are so good with their manufacturer supplied profiles, perhaps Profile Editor is not used much anymore." I have so many questions - starting with how do I even know which specific profile is being used, whether it is from Leica, and whether it is up to date. The camera, lens, monitor, scanner (if any) and printer / paper combo all need to be color managed with profiles or calibrations. You wrote " For accurate color, all of your digital devices need to be profiler or calibrated. Before I get much further, I need to create a profile to do this. It seems to work fine, but when I start with the original red cast, I end up with just as bad a blue cast. Someone posted a Lightroom tool to do this, which I downloaded. Second, I need to swap the red and blue channels, which in the past required Photoshop. That is why I am trying to create a new profile. Basically it will generate a creative profile in xmp format that you can call up in Lightroom Classic, Camera Raw and Lightroom CC.įirst, I need to get rid of the red cast over the whole image. It will contain instructions on how to generate profiles that shift white balance, change saturation, etc. Go to Digital Negative (DNG), Adobe DNG Converter | Adobe Photoshop CC and download the profiles SDK. They changed the way we are supposed to make profiles now.
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