CinePaint – 16-bit imaging. From digital camera to print
The top slider, "exposure", is as well the most important one. He influences the lightness in the image.
The finaly corrected image is then saved as a 16-bit Tiff for CinePaint. Afterward it can be loaded in CinePaint.
Calibrated in CinePaint
With the standard profile selector: "Default image profile:", you can set a profile as source for untagged image data. For a scanner workstation this could be the scanner profile for instance. For a printhouse it would be the house intern offset device profile. Usually sRGB is the best setting for most cases.
We start with the buildin rawphoto-PlugIn from David Coffin. Drag a camera RAW image from a Gtk-application and drop it to the toolbox of CinePaint, or open with the file selector under menu: "File" −> "Open...". The settings of the rawphoto dialog should allmost stay the same.
Now you can select from the upper image menu under "Image" the entry "Assign ICC Profile...". The image profile dialog appears. This is the place to set the device profile.![]() |
On the left you can see the loaded image, with assigned camera profile. It is now corrected by default in CinePaint to the monitor. The image looks much better. We will use the device profile for our future manipulations.
To continue with our corrections we call the levels dialog (image menu: "Image" −> "Colors" −> "Levels"). Here we set white and black point. The eye dropper tool allowes us to work intuitively on the image, promising the most success. After setting this two points we may set a gray point, but for difficult light situations only.![]() |
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In order to make the right image looking like the left image, we can change the saturation in the curves dialog. Therefore we convert the Ufraw image to the CIE*Lab colour space. This equaly spaced appearing colour space allowes us to do manipulations, which are human vision alike. The conversion can be done like allready described. The "Rendering Intent" selector, below the profile selector, is set to "Relative Colorimetric". Using such tells littleCMS colour module (lcms) to convert without changes in colour space. More details about this setting can be found later under the Print capter.![]() |
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For the separation in a 4-channel colour space (like cmyk) the colour conversion dialog can be called (image menu: "Image" −> "Convert using ICC Profile..."). Before this a alpha channel needs to be in the image (image menu: "Image" −> "Alpha" −> "Add Alpha Channel"). We duplicate the calibrated IT8 test chart and separate as described above. The destination colour spaces belonges in our example to a offset print machine.| Perceptual | Relative Colorimetric | Saturation | Absolute Colorimetric | |
| without black point compen- sation |
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| with black point compen- sation |
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profile dependend Colours are transformed equally spaced The appearence of the original image is rendered to the output medium. |
profile independend Colours which are within the target gamut are mapped 1:1, colours outside gamut are mapped to the nearest colour at the gamut of the target colour space. The source white point is transformed to target white point. |
maximum saturation, has nearly no practical importance | profile independent like Relative Colorimetric without maintaining the white point |
| Perceptual | Relative Colorimetric | Absolute Colorimetric / Original | |
| without black point compen- sation |
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| with black point compen- sation |
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| Original | Photoprinter | ISO Uncoated Yellowish |
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| Some original colours of the IT8 calibration chart (within the light LStar-RGB) are looking outside the coloured monitor and gray photoprinter colour spaces. This means, you can allways expect colour shifts somewhere for highly saturated colours during the separation to the print colour space. |
Big colour space areas of the photo printer (light gray) are not displayable in the monitor colour space (coloured). less suitable for softproofing |
Nearly all colour of "ISO Uncoated Yellowish" can be shown in the monitor colour space (coloured). useful for softproofing |
Here is gray the colour space of the photo printer shown, our IT8 test chart patches, perceptual rendered into the "ISO Uncoated Yellowish" colour space (coloured). The targeted simulation seems to be possible without any deformations of the colour space. All patches from the "ISO Uncoated Yellowish" colour space of our idealised offset machine are fitting nicely in the gamut of the photo printer.
You reach the separation dialog over the image menu: "File" −> "Print". As rendering intent we choose "Relative colorimetric" and leave alle the other settings. Now the image should be separated from the offset CMYK colour space to the photo printer CMYK colour space by littleCMS. After a while the newly separated image appears and then the Gutenprint dialog pops up. There we select the proper photo printer and avoid changing any colour influencing settings. The image can been placed and resized on the sheed. It is represented by the black rectangle. And then print.