MCPunk mentioned he had 2 Fords: his recently acquired Sonic Blue SVT and a Mustang. This is that Mustang. His car inspired me to hunt down my car, and I inspired him to hunt down his Focus. I guess you can say that we tend to inspire each other, both in mods and tastes in cars. Today, we went to the Peckerheadz car show at TJ's in Matowah (spelling?), and then jetted over to Duluth afterwards. We have been wanting to do a shoot in Port Terminal for over a year now, and what better day than today? It was the perfect weather, and perfect lighting. Next time, we are going to do the Focii together. Possibly before winter?
I don't know why, but this picture turned out a lot more green once it was uploaded to Photobucket...
This is probably my new favorite edit. I've been on a high contrast kick for a really long time now...and is a lot more saturated once it was uploaded to Photobucket...what the hell?
Litestorm17 wrote:turned out a lot more green once it was uploaded to Photobucket...
and is a lot more saturated once it was uploaded to Photobucket...what the hell?
What colorspace are you using? Some browsers do funky things with your photos if they aren't in sRGB. I used to have this issue, then fixed it for my browser, but realized everyone else would still be seeing funky colors. So I just stick with using sRGB especially for web stuff.
Redlineracer12 wrote:
What colorspace are you using? Some browsers do funky things with your photos if they aren't in sRGB. I used to have this issue, then fixed it for my browser, but realized everyone else would still be seeing funky colors. So I just stick with using sRGB especially for web stuff.
I'm using Google Chrome on a first-gen Unibody MacBook pro, so I've just got my system colorspace set to Color LCD. But your statement confuses me...I didn't know that you could set color spaces in-browser. Or am I misunderstanding?
Redlineracer12 wrote:
What colorspace are you using? Some browsers do funky things with your photos if they aren't in sRGB. I used to have this issue, then fixed it for my browser, but realized everyone else would still be seeing funky colors. So I just stick with using sRGB especially for web stuff.
I'm using Google Chrome on a first-gen Unibody MacBook pro, so I've just got my system colorspace set to Color LCD. But your statement confuses me...I didn't know that you could set color spaces in-browser. Or am I misunderstanding?
No the picture itself has an embedded colorspace usually. What I'm saying is from my experience the only embedded colorspace you should rely on to look correct in a browser is sRGB. You can tweak YOUR browser to work correctly with other colorspaces, but then other people with standard browser settings will still see the color's off.