Abstract: Canon EOS 30D Review

 • Canon EOS-1D X • Canon EOS 5D Mk4 • Canon EOS 5D Mk3 • Canon EOS 7D Mk2  • Canon EOS 80D • Digital Rebel T6 • Nikon D800 • Nikon D7100  • Powershot G1-X • Depth of Field • Sensor Cleaning • Archival Storage  • EOS Lenses • EOS Speedlites • Best EOS Lenses • EOS lens Adapters  • Macro Lenses • Portrait Lenses • Telephoto Lenses • Wideangle Lenses  • Memory Cards • Build a Website • Canon REBATES • EOS lens database

Bob Atkins Photography
Digital Home Page

Reviews - Lenses
• See Reviews Section

Reviews - Cameras
• Canon Powershot G11
• Canon EOS 7D
• Digital Rebel T1i
• Canon EOS 5D MkII
• Canon EOS 50D
• Canon Rebel Xsi
• Canon A720is
• Canon EOS 40D
• Sony Alpha A100
• Canon EOS 30D
• Canon EOS 5D
• Digital Rebel XTi
• Canon EOS 20D
• Digital Rebel XT
• Canon EOS 10D
• Canon Digital Rebel
• Canon SD200
• Canon A610
• Canon A80
• HP 707
• HP 945

Reviews - Software
• Picasa v2.5.0
• Paint Shop Pro X
• Paint Shop Pro 9

Previews - Cameras
• Canon EOS 7D
• Sony Alpha A550 and A500
• Sony Alpha A850
• Pentax K7
• Sony Alpha A900
• Nikon D3x
• Canon SX10 is
• Canon EOS 5D MkII
• Nikon D90
• Nikon D3
• Canon EOS 50D
• Digital Rebel XSi
• Canon EOS 1Ds MkIII
• Canon EOS 1D MkIII
• Canon EOS 400D
• Canon EOS 5D
• Canon EOS 1Ds Mk II
• Canon EOS 1D MkII N
• Canon EOS 20Da
• Canon EOS 1D Mark II
• Canon S3 IS
• Canon S2 IS
• Canon A710is
• Canon A630/640
• Canon A620/610
• Canon SD700 IS
• Canon SD630
• Canon SD600
• Canon A410
• Canon G7
• Canon G6
• Canon Pro 1
• Fuji FinePix F30
• Nikon D40
• Nikon D200
• Nikon D50
• Nikon D70
• Nikon D70s
• Nikon D80
• Nikon D300
• Nikon D700
• Nikon 8700
• Maxxum 5D
• Maxxum 7D
• Pentax K10D
• Pentax *ist D
• Pentax *ist DS
• Pentax *ist DL
• Olympus E-330
• Panasonic DMC-FZ28
• Panasonic DMC-LX3
• Samsung Pro815
• Sony Alpha DSLR-A100

Reviews - Printers
• Canon SELPHY CP-510
• Canon i900D
• Canon CP-220

Reviews - Scanners
• Canon FS4000
• Canon d1230u

Guides/Articles
• Portable Data Storage
• Archival Data Storage
• Sensor Cleaning I
• Sensor Cleaning II
• Image Resizing
• Digital Basics
• A Digital FAQ
• EOS 10D or 300D?
• Compact Flash
• Canon News
• Digital Primer
• PMA 2004 digicams
• Digital Rebel Hack
• EOS 20D/300D Lenses
• Choosing Cameras
• Choosing Printers
• Digital Photo Books

 

Canon EOS 30D - Hands-on Review


Picture Styles

Canon have added the Picture Styles mode to the EOS 30D. It's also available on the EOS 5D and EOS 1D Mk II N. Canon likens the effects of the picture style modes to the ability to use different types of film in film cameras. The various settings are optimized for various effects and applications, with different settings for contrast, sharpness, saturation and color tone as well as some differences in color mapping and curves which aren't documented.

  • Standard is set to give the results that most people tend to prefer for general photographic subjects. It provides the optimal sharpness for printing images without post-exposure processing.
  • Portrait fine-tunes images for better skin reproduction and is well-suited for shooting women and children with light skin color. It adjusts magenta, red, and yellow color tones to produce healthy skin color with minimum color bias and lowers sharpness to smooth out skin texture.
  • Landscape reproduces color tones in the green-to-blue range more vividly than "Standard", so blue skies and green foliage seem more colorful. I also uses a higher sharpness setting.
  • Neutral is optimized for images are shot with the intent of post-exposure processing an application like Digital Photo Professional or PhotoShop. Without post-processing prints from these images would look subdued and dull but the images allow the greatest freedom in post-processing.
  • Faithful reproduces colors that are colorimetrically as close as possible to the actual colors of a subject shot under 5200K lighting conditions. It emphasizes correctability and tends to produce colors similar (but not identical) to those of the "Neutral" Picture Style and it also uses lower settings for saturation and contrast. However, rather than overall image appearance, it stresses color accuracy as much as possible.
  • Monochrome renders the image in black and white - or black and white tinted sepia, blue, green or purple. It also permits yellow, green, orange and red filters to be simulated.

In addition to the predefined Picture Styles, there are 3 user settable modes in which Sharpness, Contrast, Saturation and Color Tone can be set (as they can with the EOS 20D as described below).

Here are examples of the various picture styles. Differences are subtle, but real. Note these images are NOT of the standard Macbeth color chart (though the color patches are similar) so don't try to gauge absolute color accuracy from them.

Canon EOS 30D Review

It's probably easier to see difference in the following image, which shows samples from the third row of each color image side by side:

Canon EOS 30D Review

 

The EOS 20D doesn't have built in Picture Styles, but the same (or similar) effects can be obtained in two different ways. If you shoot in RAW mode rather than JPEG, the RAW converters in the Canon software (DPP and Zoombrowser) allow the Picture Styles to be emulated during the RAW conversion - though the RAW converters in  DPP and Zoombrowser may give slightly different results. Applying Picture Styles during RAW conversion is also possible with  30D RAW images of course, the Picture Styles are only directly applied to images saved as JPEGs (though the Picture Style settings are recorded along with RAW images and would be used by default). The 20D also has 3 sets of user settable parameters (user1, user2 and user3), as well as two presets (parameter1 and parameter 2). "Parameter 1" is close to the "Standard" Picture style with slightly higher contrast, saturation and sharpness.

EOS 30D settings to emulate 20D "parameters"
EOS 20D Sharpness Contrast Saturation Color Tone
Parameter 1 3 0 0 0
Parameter 2 2 -1 -1 0

These are the default parameter settings for the 30D Picture Styles

Standard Portrait Landscape Neutral Faithful B&W
Sharpness 3 2 4 0 0 3
Contrast 0 0 0 0 0 0
Saturation 0 0 0 0 0 -
Color Tone 0 0 0 0 0 -

Note that there are "hidden parameters" in the Picture styles since the "Neutral" and "Faithful" settings use exactly the same Sharpness, Contrast, Saturation and Color Tone settings, yet they do yield slightly different results, plus the "Standard", "Portrait" and "Landscape" modes differ only in their sharpness settings, yet again yield images which differ in color rendition as shown above. So "Picture styles" are more than just preset values of sharpness, contrast, saturation and color tone.

NEXT -> Viewfinder and Metering

© Copyright Bob Atkins All Rights Reserved
www.bobatkins.com
Last Modified 12/29/2014 07:54:04