I use a temp folder to do the strip and then move the files into the lightroom folders. The command still copies and renames originals in the same folder so you can choose to keep both if desired. Note change first tag "c:\exiftool\exiftool.exe" to the folder you put exiftool in and change the last tag "c:\exifpics" to the folder where the images reside that you want to strip. I downloaded the Adobe lens profile generator earlier - didn't realize quite how in depth a process it was! The "best practice" recommendation will be to shoot 12 sets of 9 images under otherwise constant conditions - needless to say I have to make time to do that.Īn update to your original command line for batch stripping all files in a specified folder. It's still manual right now, I'll update the first post when there is something more accessible. Right now within Lightroom I'm just using the lens profile that was generated by someone else on the board a while back along with the built-in distortion and vignetting settings my own color checker profile. Quick update on the first post, I duplicated a batch of pics from a recent fashion shoot, stripped off the profiles, and tinkered with some baseline Lightroom settings for distortion, etc. All-in-all a pretty direct route from A to F by internet message board standards! GMack and I use the colorchecker passport to generate those profiles and he shared the cool idea about making a gigantor colorchecker passport, then I got carried away by modifying it further. The relationship is that when you nuke the DJI profile you are really going to need a good color profile that you've generated. There is a huge instruction manual in the :C:>Program Files>Blackmagic Design>DaVinci Resolve>Documents folder too (1,300 pages!). Someone on the web has some cool videos on doing it in Resolve, maybe version 12 too. Sort of neat way to set the colors up and fix any odd coloration too. If you block the ColorChecker row with the Blue, Green, Red, Yellow, Magenta, and Cyan squares in Resolve and check them in the Vectorscope part, you can move the colors to the individual squares for each of those colors. They mostly use that to set up the Black and White levels and WB, but it works to double-check your printer too. Nice test in Resolve to check your printer. If they don't show as a white bar for each step and non-linear, could be your printer isn't printing right and laying down more color in the B
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