
Oh my god he has no pants.
By the way, whoever does these photoshoots at conventions, your camera apparently hates the color purple. Both these photos and the ones from FurFright needed a LOT of color correction. This is what the original photo looked like. It makes me look dark blue. Which I am not. I am purple. Dammit.
More from this photoshoot, Anthrocon 2010, and other occasions at http://drop.io/XQFursuit
By the way, whoever does these photoshoots at conventions, your camera apparently hates the color purple. Both these photos and the ones from FurFright needed a LOT of color correction. This is what the original photo looked like. It makes me look dark blue. Which I am not. I am purple. Dammit.
More from this photoshoot, Anthrocon 2010, and other occasions at http://drop.io/XQFursuit
Category Photography / Fursuit
Species Vulpine (Other)
Size 1280 x 703px
File Size 856.1 kB
If the fur comes out blue in photos and not purple, then that means there is a good chance the fur is a violet and not purple, and this could be a problem with a lot of cameras depending on the lighting. Purple is a mix of red and blue, while violet is a monochromatic color. Purple you can display on a monitor, since it has red and blue pixels, and likewise you can take pictures of since most cameras also have red and blue pixels. However violet is further on the spectrum than blue, so it would be blocked by the red filters that make the red pixels red, and picked up mostly by the blue pixels on the camera. This can make it difficult for cameras to distinguish between deep blue and deep violet. Natural lighting might be working better if it has more UV and IR that can bypass some of filters used by each pixel color.
I'm not a photographer though, so I don't know the specifics of how bad it is from camera to camera, and I've heard it can be somewhat mitigated by some cameras or color settings on a camera. I do know I have similar color issues with photos of electrical arcs coming out very blue on some cameras when they are much more white-violet color to the eye.
I'm not a photographer though, so I don't know the specifics of how bad it is from camera to camera, and I've heard it can be somewhat mitigated by some cameras or color settings on a camera. I do know I have similar color issues with photos of electrical arcs coming out very blue on some cameras when they are much more white-violet color to the eye.
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