Mark Gowin
Member
Got out for a little while this afternoon with my dad. Not a photo trip, but that is what I bought the RX1 for - those times when I might want to have a camera along, but photography is not the purpose of the trip.
The RX1 files can take a lot of processing without falling apart. In the photo below, the rocks on the far side were in deep shadows and the falls were wanting to blow the highlights. I used -100 for the highlights and +100 for the shadows in LR4. It is pretty obvious when you really look at the photo and notice the different color temperature of the rocks on the near side versus far side. That could be adjusted some using a brush to normalize the white balance, but I didn't do that in this case. I don't intend to print the image so I didn't bother. The point I am trying to illustrate is that the image holds up nicely to pretty heaving processing adjustments even when pixel peeping at 100%.
Mark
The RX1 files can take a lot of processing without falling apart. In the photo below, the rocks on the far side were in deep shadows and the falls were wanting to blow the highlights. I used -100 for the highlights and +100 for the shadows in LR4. It is pretty obvious when you really look at the photo and notice the different color temperature of the rocks on the near side versus far side. That could be adjusted some using a brush to normalize the white balance, but I didn't do that in this case. I don't intend to print the image so I didn't bother. The point I am trying to illustrate is that the image holds up nicely to pretty heaving processing adjustments even when pixel peeping at 100%.
Mark