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That is a fascinating photograph. I'm curious about one thing. Do you have to somehow sterilise the camera before taking it into a operating theatre - or is it enough just to stand well back?Eye Surgery
There is a sterile area in the OR which one needs to be 2 feet away with unsterile equipment to protect the patient or else incur the wrath of the circulating nurse. I routinely photograph and video in OR's and make sure I listen carefully to the nurses in charge.That is a fascinating photograph. I'm curious about one thing. Do you have to somehow sterilise the camera before taking it into a operating theatre - or is it enough just to stand well back?
LouisB
Painterly, like paint builds up after much work and reworkRain started a few seconds later. I tried exposure bracketing to keep the highlight detail. I usually prefer a natural look to landscapes. I want it to feel "yes, that's just what it was like." And yet, something drew me to this processing. I'm horrified and fascinated. Oh well - I guess everyone goes through an over-processed HDR stage...
--Matt
Lovely colors.A few from last week in Grenada
Sadly, though I enjoyed the camera greatly (having purchased it on eBay at Christmas) it has had to go to Solms to have two faults sorted out. One is a sensor spot (grrr) and one is a faulty 4-way control pad, which has no 'click' feel or sound on the downstroke though it does work properly.
I decided to get the Q because the RX1RII is on perma-delivery-delay and because while I was waiting for it, I tried a Q and loved it. I might prefer the better sensor and higher pixel count of the Sony, but for look, feel and focal length, the Leica wins. Great lens too, though a lot of that is software - and by my calculation from looking at the files in RAW Digger, by the time the camera has made the lens corrections, you're not getting 24mp but 21.5mp interpolated upwards. Never mind, the files are nice enough though the shadows aren't as good as a Sony sensor would be.
ps. I processed these on a Mac but whilst travelling, I used an iPad Pro and it really was fun - PS Express can even read the RAW files. The only problem is no highlight and shadow blowout warnings.
Thanks. It's opaque but easy: shoot RAW + JPEG. do a simple import onto ipad's Photos app using either direct cable or card reader. Then use Photoshop Express app to open the image and, if it sees a raw companion file it will open and edit that rather than the JPEG. To test this, set camera style to B&W so that the JPEG is monochrome. You'll see that PS Express opens the color file, in other words the DNG rather than the JPEG. This is the easiest workflow out of various options, with the caveat that the work you do is then saved as a JPEG.Lovely colors.
How did you get your RAW images onto your iPad
Pro?
-Bill
Great! I'll pick up a card reader with a lightning connector.Thanks. It's opaque but easy: shoot RAW + JPEG. do a simple import onto ipad's Photos app using either direct cable or card reader. Then use Photoshop Express app to open the image and, if it sees a raw companion file it will open and edit that rather than the JPEG. To test this, set camera style to B&W so that the JPEG is monochrome. You'll see that PS Express opens the color file, in other words the DNG rather than the JPEG. This is the easiest workflow out of various options, with the caveat that the work you do is then saved as a JPEG.