Thank you so much for your video! I just got my D100 with only 1300 actuations I have newer D850 and other cameras but this is the closest you can get to a film camera it's like Digital photography UNPLUGGED!! haha Cheers from Park City Utah!
I have a similar process for all digital workflow images and the basics are shoot raw, edit raw, tweak slightly in raster. I use Photoshop CS6 (and will do so for the rest of my life unless Adobe decides to go back to a license model vs. subscription model) and then adjust the sliders until I like the image look. In general, highlights get dropped a lot, shadows lifted, and then whites and blacks adjusted to balance contrast. I don't do a lot with color enhancements or changes because I have an image aesthetic of creating photos that represent the world as it is. In raw, I also close out dust spots because I can do that in batches, which saves a lot of time. In raster, I'll do a slight sharpen, maybe a slight crop to level horizons if needed. I don't do lots of fancy stuff in post most of the time.
No you can't shoot in B & W best to shoot RAW and change in NX Studio, I have also used Photoshop Elements and you can change the colour profile in Adobe RAW including B & W.
Setting time and date should be the first thing you do when you get a camera as that info is then added to EXIF data for every photo you take. You mat need to adjust time every month or so as clock does drift over time.
Thank you so much for your video! I just got my D100 with only 1300 actuations I have newer D850 and other cameras but this is the closest you can get to a film camera it's like Digital photography UNPLUGGED!! haha Cheers from Park City Utah!
Have had my D100 since new but don't use it much now so your videos are interesting and remind me just how advanced a camera it was.
This 3 part series was helpful! Just got a D100, my first d SLR, and I have no idea how to use it.
Well, now I do. Thank you!
@@mstrikesback168 thank you!
Can you share your image processing workflow with D100 images?
I have a similar process for all digital workflow images and the basics are shoot raw, edit raw, tweak slightly in raster. I use Photoshop CS6 (and will do so for the rest of my life unless Adobe decides to go back to a license model vs. subscription model) and then adjust the sliders until I like the image look. In general, highlights get dropped a lot, shadows lifted, and then whites and blacks adjusted to balance contrast. I don't do a lot with color enhancements or changes because I have an image aesthetic of creating photos that represent the world as it is. In raw, I also close out dust spots because I can do that in batches, which saves a lot of time. In raster, I'll do a slight sharpen, maybe a slight crop to level horizons if needed. I don't do lots of fancy stuff in post most of the time.
Thank you for break down of sttings in menu. Is one able to set monotone in menu for black and white JPEG directly from camera?
Thank you! IIRC, yes. There's an image color option (I believe I discussed it in the second video) that allows for different tonings.
Ive looked in the camera manual, there is no adjustment to colour choice like B&W, Standard, Vivid etc like on the next model semi pro D200.
No you can't shoot in B & W best to shoot RAW and change in NX Studio, I have also used Photoshop Elements and you can change the colour profile in Adobe RAW including B & W.
Setting time and date should be the first thing you do when you get a camera as that info is then added to EXIF data for every photo you take. You mat need to adjust time every month or so as clock does drift over time.