Postby ggroess » Mon Jun 28, 2010 1:39 pm
The neutrals issue always seems to confuse people....
A neutral is not 50% gray.
A neutral is equal parts of all the colors used in the color space. for RGB it is 0,0,0 or 255,255,255 or even 100,100,100 in LAB it is always XXX,0,0 it matters very little what the actual values are. When we get to color by the numbers you will see that you need all of those examples to make it work. You need a highlight , shadow and mid-tone marker to correct any given image.
"They" suggest 50% gray so that you have pixel values to work with; so that you are not working with a blown out highlight or a locked up shadow. It is also the easiest to illustrate; it's Gray....The Sample size is also important at this point. If your sample is 3X3 you are really only looking at 9 pixels to set the neutral for the entire image. 50% would have a higher than average number of neutral pixels. The only way of having a truly Gray value in your image is to shoot a known gray card under the lighting you are using. If the lighting changes so does the neutral.
So what do we do?? We approximate. We use parts of the image that we know intuitively are supposed to be neutral...with simultaneous contrast we can get away with a lot...if you go completely numeric you get locked into a big struggle with the values...too much time and effort from my position. You can get all calibrationist if you need to... but I simply calibrate my monitor every 2 weeks or so with a I-one2 and try to not over stress it too much.
It is always "preferable" to have a 50% gray just as it is always preferable to have a $100 over $50. The reality is a 50% gray is a good find...but not a show stopper...one of the best uses of CM is to shoot a gray card if you are doing a batch of images in a set location.
Let's say I am shooting a studio portrait. I would shoot a gray card with the model as my first image. This gives me a known Gray in an image under the lighting I am working with...1000%. I correct the image to the gray card, bump the saturation as needed, Save the ACV and apply that ACV file to every image I shoot in that session; and I quickly correct every image in the set. I'm consistent, fast and accurate...Life is good....
In your quote you are forgetting White and Black can be neutrals...I'll have to go watch the solution again...sometimes Mike takes the long way to the description....
I hope I answered you r question...I feel like I just stepped off the soap box....
Greg