English: Photograph of Captain Clive Franklyn Collett (1920), Great War medal recipient from New Zealand.
Archives New Zealand Reference: AALZ 25044 5 / F2073 63
Part of a series of photographs obtained by the New Zealand National Museum provided by families of New Zealanders who had received a medal during the Great War.
نسب العمل إلى مُؤَلِّفه – يلزم نسب العمل إلى مُؤَلِّفه بشكل مناسب وتوفير رابط للرخصة وتحديد ما إذا أجريت تغييرات. بالإمكان القيام بذلك بأية طريقة معقولة، ولكن ليس بأية طريقة تشير إلى أن المرخِّص يوافقك على الاستعمال.
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هذا الملف يحتوي على معلومات إضافية، غالبا ما تكون أضيفت من قبل الكاميرا الرقمية أو الماسح الضوئي المستخدم في إنشاء الملف.
إذا كان الملف قد عدل عن حالته الأصلية، فبعض التفاصيل قد لا تعبر عن الملف المعدل.
تعليق ملف JPEG
Digitization equipment:
Copy Lighting Unit: Kaiser RB 5055 HF (AC 230V, 50Hz; 4 x fluorescent lamps of 55W each; colour temperature: 5400 K)
Camera sensor: Phase One IQ180
Camera body: Phase One 645 DF
Lens: Schneider Kreuznach LS 80mm f/2.8
Capture software: Capture One DB 7.2.1 (64 bit).
Digitization notes:
Captured in RAW and output as TIFF in Capture One.
Capture was flat-fielded to correct for light falloff and lens distortion.
No sharpening was applied at either the lens correction stage or in post-production.
A Film Standard gamma curve was applied to the RAW image before output.
A minority of items were shot under preservation-quality photographic glass due to lack of flatness. These were batched separately to allow for accurate colour correction.
Colour accuracy was achieved by shooting an X-Rite Colour Checker Classic as a reference target at the start of each batch. White balance was set via the Neutral 8 square (the second-lightest grey patch, with RGB values of 200), and all conditions and settings were kept consistent to this reference shot for each batch. All RGB values in the Preservation Master are therefore accurate within the Adobe RGB (1998) colour space.
Before shooting, testing was done to establish the lens and aperture that would produce the sharpest results. The Schneider Kreuznach LS 80mm f/2.8 produced better results than the Mamiya 645 Macro MF 1200mm 1:4.
Some items had significant amounts of cardboard adhered to the surface of the photograph at the edges; for public viewing a cropped Modified Master was created.