2018-02-01, 09:48 PM
(This post was last modified: 2018-02-05, 07:26 PM by BronzeTitan.
Edit Reason: grammar
)
I tried the point-to-point color correction approach by starting with the original artwork, . .
. . and overlaying the HD-TV (Judgment) screencap, . .
. . and selecting a variety of color points to sample (shown here only with the background pictures were dimmed, for easier visualization) . .
The sample R-G-B values from both pictures were then entered into a paint program's Curves function . .
When I saw these graphs (and the resulting HD-TV adjustment) I knew there was a problem. When near-by colors jump around like this, it's always a clue that the newer source was digitally manipulated (an HSL Wheel/Scope/whatever) rather than analogically adjusted. Segments of the spectrum were independently changed in different directions.
So the Curves technique, by itself, failed do the job of color correction. Just to continue the test, I manually pulled the those points, outside of the general curve swing, closer inwards. That removed psychedelic "color patches" in the picture but colors were still notably off (too strong, wrong hues, and such).
Continuing with the test, I added the HSL Wheel adjustment to it. That easily brought errant colors back into line -- not perfectly, but closer to a representative of the original artwork.
So scrapping the point-to-point Curves as the main approach, I'll use the HSL Wheel. Stay tuned.
. . and overlaying the HD-TV (Judgment) screencap, . .
. . and selecting a variety of color points to sample (shown here only with the background pictures were dimmed, for easier visualization) . .
The sample R-G-B values from both pictures were then entered into a paint program's Curves function . .
When I saw these graphs (and the resulting HD-TV adjustment) I knew there was a problem. When near-by colors jump around like this, it's always a clue that the newer source was digitally manipulated (an HSL Wheel/Scope/whatever) rather than analogically adjusted. Segments of the spectrum were independently changed in different directions.
So the Curves technique, by itself, failed do the job of color correction. Just to continue the test, I manually pulled the those points, outside of the general curve swing, closer inwards. That removed psychedelic "color patches" in the picture but colors were still notably off (too strong, wrong hues, and such).
Continuing with the test, I added the HSL Wheel adjustment to it. That easily brought errant colors back into line -- not perfectly, but closer to a representative of the original artwork.
So scrapping the point-to-point Curves as the main approach, I'll use the HSL Wheel. Stay tuned.