Last edited by tybrad; 28th June 2022 at 08:57 PM.
Yes, well... that's the in-camera setting, which will be applied to the camera -generated jpeg.
But you use an editor program on that jpeg. That editor can set the colour space to use (and in some cases has to, when there is no colour space indicated in the imported file).
Looking at this screenshot from GraphicConverter shows a default of AdobeRGB if there's no colour space assigned to the image
So that might be the cause of what we see here...
sRBG or AdobeRGB never concerns the raw file, only the jpeg produced by the camera (a version of which is also embedded in the raw file, but that's a detail).
A raw file has no associated colour space; until it is developed, it's not even an image, just a series of values corresponding to the pixels on the sensor. You need
quite a bit of information (from the metadata) to turn raw data into an image.
Thank you, everyone. This discussion has elevated my understanding by a lot.
Nope - try starting with a great image.
While many strong images are sharp (which often means the main subject is in focus), many are not. The ICM example that Peter gives is one technique where sharpness is not important. Motion blur is definitely something that we often use in strong images. Selective focus (i.e. using appropriate depth of field to blur parts of the image) is another technique that can give extremely strong images, even though there are areas that are not in focus and lack sharpness. The "well lit" I will agree with. These are the technical characteristics of an image (and there are many others that you have not listed).
You are missing two even more import aspects of a strong image; strong composition and strong impact.
Nail all three of these aspects of a photograph and you will have a strong image...
This is one of those nice situations where everyone is right, at least in part. For many images, Leo is spot on, IMHO. For those images, a good composition is worthless if the image is poorly focused or poorly lit. For other images, Peter and Manfred are spot on.
Here's a useful (I hope) comparison: two images taken about 40 miles (64 km) from each other in western Massachusetts. I'm not very good at landscapes in general, but the first one was one of my more successful images. It would have been a failure if it had been out of focus, otherwise unsharp, or poorly lit:
The second one was taken with the ICM technique Peter referenced. It's outside the Clark Institute, which has a fabulous collection of impressionists, and I was working on using ICM to achieve some of the same effect. Had it been sharp, it would have failed.