I am shooting with a Nikon D200 and I shoot in RAW (NEF) format. I would like to know how to create a sepia tone photo. Any advise would be great. I prefer to use programs like GIMP and/or other open source programs if possible.
This is a discussion on How to create Sepia Tone within the Alternative photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I am shooting with a Nikon D200 and I shoot in RAW (NEF) format. I would like to know how ...
I am shooting with a Nikon D200 and I shoot in RAW (NEF) format. I would like to know how to create a sepia tone photo. Any advise would be great. I prefer to use programs like GIMP and/or other open source programs if possible.
http://www.gimp.org/tutorials/Sepia_Toning/
I'm a Photoshop guy, and I tone almost all of my images. I've got an action I recorded that adds a channel mixing layer to make the image B&W, adds a curves layer so I can tweak the contrast, and puts another curves layer on top that loads a saved sepia setting. Fast, easy, and consistent. If I decide I like it better untoned, I just turn off the sepia layer.
I made the sepia curve by finding a nicely toned image I liked, writing down some of the RGB values at different brightnesses, and plugging them into the separate curves channels.
Check your manual - you may also have a setting IN CAMERA that allows you to shoot the image in sepia.
- Please connect with me further
Photo tours of Montreal - Private photography courses
- Join the new Photography.ca Facebook page
- Follow me on Twitter http://twitter.com/markokulik
- Follow me on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/111159185852360398018/posts
- Check out the photography podcast
"You have to milk the cow quite a lot, and get plenty of milk to get a little cheese." Henri Cartier-Bresson from The Decisive Moment.
As there are tons and tons and tons of free PS actions out there to create sepia I would recommend against EVER using the Black and white or sepia setting in your camera.
First they don't give you any control over how the image is converted, and it is converted, your CCD/CMOS etc chip only takes color pictures, so if you choose the sepia setting, it just converts it after its taken.
But my real reason for not doing BW or sepia in camera is once you do this, its always sepia and its tought to change. If you shoot in color and then do the sepia in post then you still have the original color image that you can use as color, or black and white, or sepia or strip out all the greens etc..
I generally use NIK's SilverFX pro. Very nice plugin for doing BW and Sepia conversions.. It gives you tons of control as to how the images are converted.
Oops you are using gimp. Sorry I missed that part.
I see Jello's point here but this is digital. You can surely try a frame to "see" how the image might look in sepia, then shoot an additional 'normal' frame.
Sometimes it's nice to see the effect on the spot.
- Please connect with me further
Photo tours of Montreal - Private photography courses
- Join the new Photography.ca Facebook page
- Follow me on Twitter http://twitter.com/markokulik
- Follow me on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/111159185852360398018/posts
- Check out the photography podcast
"You have to milk the cow quite a lot, and get plenty of milk to get a little cheese." Henri Cartier-Bresson from The Decisive Moment.
Bookmarks