This tab is used to control the colors of the preview and scan. It lets you specify film type, film base color, image brightness, color balancing, black and white points and color space.
Use this option to set the type of color balance you want for each image. The default setting of White Balance is appropriate for typical lighting conditions. See the topic "Adjusting Color Balance" for general guidance on using Neutral and Auto levels to handle these cases if White Balance is not right.
The black and white points aren't used at all, and the image is only corrected for the CCD's color response (if the Media type option is set to Image) or by the film's color response. This image is gamma corrected.
Both the black and white points are used to stretch the image's intensity range. However, the relative ratios of red, green, and blue are specificed manually.
Both the black and white points are used to stretch the image's intensity range. However, the relative ratios of red, green, and blue are kept constant.
Both the black and white points are adjusted to compensate for an image lit by tungsten light (i.e. a normal incandescent light bulb). This removes the reddish cast from indoor pictures taken without a flash.
Both the black and white points are adjusted to compensate for an image lit by fluorescent light. This removes the greenish cast from indoor pictures lit by fluorescent lights or lit by flash.
Both the black and white points are adjusted to compensate for an image taken at night. The white balance is determined from the darkest 10% of the image, which often produces the best results when images have bright fluorescent or incandescent lights that are greenish or yellowish.
VueScan analyzes the image and adjusts it to make the color balance look like the scene is lit by daylight.
This is a simple mapping of the darkest color to 0.00 intensity and the brightest color to 0.95 intensity.
The black point is used by the color balance algorithm and is computed by using the histogram of each color in the image. Use this option to leave the black point at the minimum intensity (0%), or to choose the black point such that some percentage of the pixels in the image are below the black point.
The default black point is 0. Setting a higher value will cause tones close to black to become pure black, which can improve contrast. Setting the black point too high will cause shadow detail to be lost.
This option lets you set the black point manually. Note that these values are in linear space, not gamma corrected space, so the only practical way to use these values is to use the "Input|Lock image color" option.
The white point is used by the color balance algorithm and is computed by using the histogram of each color in the image. Use this option to leave the white point at the maximum intensity (0%), or to choose the white point such that some percentage of the pixels in the image are above the white point.
The default white point is 1% (that is, the brightest 1% of pixels are all converted to pure white). Setting a higher value will cause tones close to white to become pure white. This can improve contrast and overall intensity of the image. Setting the white point too high will cause details in areas of highlights (e.g. the gray puffs of a cloud) to be lost, making the image look flat.
This option lets you set the white point manually. Note that these values are in linear space, not gamma corrected space, so the only practical way to use these values is to use the "Input|Lock image color" option.
Use this option to increase or decrease the overall image brightness.
VueScan's brightness is effectively a multiplier of the gamma of the color space.
Use these options to increase or decrease the red/green/blue image brightness. Note that this is a gamma multiplier, where 1.0 is the default setting.
This option displays values for the base color of the film, and can be edited. These options are available if "Input|Lock film base color" is set and are usually set automatically.
This is primarily useful if you're scanning a series of negatives or slides from the same roll of film as it's base color will always be the same.
Use these options to set up the film type for various settings for the "Input|Media type" option.
Choose the appropriate vendor, brand and type from the list. Examine the edge of the film around the sprockets to determine type.
If your film is not listed, the generic option is often a good choice.
Use these options to set the color space. A color space is a combination of color primaries and white point. For most situations, the default color space is probably best.
Color spaces are used to provide a well-known standard that ensures a given color is the same in one medium (e.g. the display monitor) as it is in others (e.g. printed output). If you use specific color spaces, you must ensure that all other software, printing, etc. that operates on that source uses the same color space. Color spaces are an advanced topic -- use them only if you understand and need them.
The Scanner color space is the color space used by a scanner, raw scan file or raw digital camera file. It is also the name of the ICC file that gets written when "Profile|Profile scanner" is chosen. There are two options for Scanner color space - built-in, which is the color space of a pre-profiled scanner, and "ICC profile", which is an ICC profile produced by the "Profile|Profile scanner" command.
The Printer color space is used to control how the colors look when they are sent to your printer. You should normally use the default setting unless you're profiling your printer.
The Film color space is an advanced option for adjusting for the color of film stocks.
The Output color space is used when writing images to JPEG, TIFF and Index files.
Note that if you use the Apple RGB, ColorMatch RGB, ProPhoto RGB or ECI RGB color space, the image gamma will be 1.8. If you use any other color space, the image gamma will be 2.2.
You can change the image gamma by using the "Color|Image brightness" option. This is a multiplier of the gamma of the color space chosen.
The Monitor color space is the color space used to display images in the Preview and Scan tabs. The default value is usually correct for most systems.
If you set this option to "ICC profile", you can specify the name of an ICC profile.
The Scanner, Printer and Film ICC profiles are normally read-only, but will also be written when the "Profile|Profile scanner/printer/film" commands are used.
Use this option to add a description to the ICC profile when it's created. This description is used by programs like Photoshop to identify a profile.
Every IT8 or Q60 target has an associated data file that describes the measured color at each square in the target. This file is read when the "Profile|Profile scanner" command is used. If you don't have a data file for your target, the default IT8 target colors will be used.
When this option is enabled, a grid is overlaid over the crop box showing where the IT8 target locations are. Note that this grid only outlines the grey bar at the bottom of the target and the first 19 columns of the color boxes.
Use this option to view all three color channels normally ("RGB") or to view the red, green, blue or infrared channel alone.
The default value is "RGB".
Use this option to enable setting the clipped black and white colors, the out of gamut colors and the infrared defect colors.
Use this option to show the pixels that have at least one color clipped to zero intensity.
These colored pixels aren't written to output files, but are displayed in the Preview and Scan tabs.
Use this option to show the pixels that have at least one color clipped to maximum intensity.
These colored pixels aren't written to output files, but are displayed in the Preview and Scan tabs.
Use this option to show the pixels that have at least one color component that is out of gamut.
These colored pixels aren't written to output files, but are displayed in the Preview and Scan tabs.
Use this option to show the defects found by the "Filter|Infrared clean" option.
These colored pixels aren't written to output files, but are displayed in the Preview and Scan tabs.
This option is only useful when "Filter|Infrared clean" is enabled.
Select this option to reveal the specialized options in this tab.
Note that some options are available only when your scanning hardware supports a specific function. Other options will display only when certain other related options are set.