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RGB number for skin tonesDoes anyone have a files or artical that can give me the numbers for different skin tone colors
I have just downloaded & watched a podcast that delt with numbers for differnt aged & ethnic people eg young children, older children, middle aged adults, fair skined males , suntanned adults asin chinldren & so on If a file or artical exists i would appreciate a copy or link warren Nikon D50/D80 Nikon,MB-D80 70-200 2.8 VR,Sigma 18-50 2.8, Kenko 1.4x TC, 2 kit lenses ,Nikon 50mm f1.8 Nikon SB-600 Tamron 90mm 2.8 Canon 500D closeup lens
I'm certainly no expert but I'd hazard a guess to say no such document exists...
Surely every persons skin is different? Paul http://www.australiandigitalphotography.com
Living in poverty due to my addiction to NIKON... Is there a clinic that can help me?
Nah, mine's the same pasty white colour pretty much all over. http://www.moz.net.nz
have bicycle, will go to Critical Mass
I, too, doubt that there is such a table. Correct skin tones can only be judged on the output (display monitor, print-out) that interpret the RGB values in their specific ways. You'd have to consider the output device's colour profile (at least), which means that different RGB values can lead to the same tone on different output devices.
Also, skin tones are always created by reflecting light, therefore the quality of the light (esp its colour temperature) has a big impact. A warmer set of RGB values can still be viewed as "correct" or seemingly neutral if it matches the colour temperature of the rest of the image. Finally, "correct" tones much depend on what the eye is accustomed to. If you work all day long on a monitor that's been calibrated around a gray point of 9300K, then coming home to a 6500K monitor makes everything look orange. Cheers Steffen.
To back up what Steffen has said have a read
http://www.idigitalemotion.com/tutorial ... htmlteffen Life is
Stephen
The colour charts are not much use for photographers. I have never used them. A far more valuable tool might be to sample skintones from actual photographs using the eye dropper in Photoshop and collecting them to produce your own colour charts. The colours in the original post are mosty for the use of graphic artists. As others have mentioned...skin colour is infinitly variable.
Regards
Matt. K
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