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Kelvin gives you the overall warmth/coolness of your image, while the Color Filter fine-tunes tones. The Color Filter settings
Green/Magenta (G/M): Adds/removes green and magenta tints.
Blue/Amber (B/A): Enhances cool/golden tones.
Kelvin gives you the overall warmth/coolness of your image, while the Color Filter fine-tunes tones. The Color Filter settings
Green/Magenta (G/M): Adds/removes green and magenta tints.
Blue/Amber (B/A): Enhances cool/golden tones.
What's really cool is that you can mix and match your preferred color mode with the ideal gamma settings.
And this gives you extensive control to create the desired look straight out of the camera—or sets you up for smooth post-processing.
What's really cool is that you can mix and match your preferred color mode with the ideal gamma settings.
And this gives you extensive control to create the desired look straight out of the camera—or sets you up for smooth post-processing.
These define the “personality” of your image by controlling how colors are rendered.
And there's plenty to choose from, such as S-Cinetone, which is beloved for its cinematic feel, or S-Gamut3.cine, which has a wide color gamut, perfect for color grading.
These define the “personality” of your image by controlling how colors are rendered.
And there's plenty to choose from, such as S-Cinetone, which is beloved for its cinematic feel, or S-Gamut3.cine, which has a wide color gamut, perfect for color grading.
Gammas are contrast “presets” that control how shadows, highlights, and midtones are rendered. You'll also find these in the Picture Profile menu.
Sony offers a bunch of them. Each of these serves a purpose—whether you're shooting low-light, night scenes, or high-contrast environments.
Gammas are contrast “presets” that control how shadows, highlights, and midtones are rendered. You'll also find these in the Picture Profile menu.
Sony offers a bunch of them. Each of these serves a purpose—whether you're shooting low-light, night scenes, or high-contrast environments.