Originally Posted by
PRSearls
Camera sensors can vary in how they capture color; even the same camera sensor may capture things differently under tungsten, fluorescent or daylight. For the past year I have been shooting with a ColorCheckerPassport. It has calibrated color and gray patches. The software that comes with the Passport can calibrate your camera sensor's color response under any lighting condition. You photograph the Passport under those light conditions and then the software then reads and compares how the sensor recorded them with the known values of the patches. The software produces a file (you name it) that is then loaded into Lightroom or camera RAW software. You access it in Lightroom in the Develop Module (Develop Module > Camera Calibrations > Profile). Clicking on the camera profile, i.e. "1Ds-3-daylight," applies the "correction" to the image to give you a true color response; you still set the white balance by clicking on one of the gray patches. It is much easier to do than describing it. I was very surprised how much better my color looked even though I use a high-end Canon. X-Rite website has tutorials about it. I have no connection with X-Rite but I can recommend this product; it really does what it promises.
- Paul -