I’m sure this is basic stuff, but I’ve lived with it for a long time, but no more ! (I hope!).
I want to ensure that how my images look in VFB are baked into what I save out to jpg or png etc (I don’t work too much these days in exr) - yet it seems all that effort I put in PP in the VFB is lost when I save it out to jpg or png.
I lose all that saturated, contrasty juicy goodness…
If I look at the jpg / png in any application on my computer (eg Windows Explorer, Windows Photos, Google Chrome, Firefox, Photoshop etc etc) that jpg/png is low contrast and dull in comparison with what I’m seeing in the VFB.
The difference is most likely due to the limited color palette of 8-bit images. Try saving a .exr and see if the image is closer to what is seen in the VFB.
I did think it was that, once I was away from my project
Color gamut.
Maybe that’d be something that could be added to the VFB - i..e a button to toggle on and off what is showing as the full color gamut and then a toggle button to show a preview of how this image will look in jpg/8-bit ?
(isn’t that what that dropdown list at the bottom of the VFB is for ?)
Sorry, I don’t understand, please could you elaborate ? Is it for a single pixel ? (say for use with the cursor position ?) Can you give an example where this feature is useful ? (Meanwhile I’ll take a look at the docs so I understand better).
That would be brilliant, thank you! Any step which saves exporting an image to view in another application would be a really great timesaver.
start with changing your display correction layer to gamma 2.2 - I’m assuming you are saving with 2.2 through 3ds.
this is why your blacks are more milky on the saved output. you are making corrections looking through one transform and saving through another.