Tone Mapping/de

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Page prepared for referencing only. --fherb (talk) 12:48, 14 March 2017 (MST)

= Dynamikkompression =

The effects of this tool are visible at any zoom level. However, due to the nature of the algorithm, only the 1:1 (or more) preview zoom will match the saved image perfectly. If you are zoomed out at less than 1:1, you should be aware that the preview can match the saved image very well or not so well, depending on the "Edge Stopping" and "Scale" sliders. Read the " Getting the preview to match the saved image" section below. Use a detail window (click on the icon under the  main preview panel) to inspect a part of the image, or zoom the main preview to 100% (also called 1:1).

The Tone Mapping tool can be used to lift the dark areas of your photo in a way that prevents halos from appearing, and it can be used to bring out or suppress detail, to make the photo more crisp or more 'dreamy'. Tone mapping adjusts the global contrast of an image differently from the local contrast. Specifically, it's very useful for decreasing large scale contrasts while preserving (or boosting) small scale contrasts. The method used is taken from Edge-Preserving Decompositions for Tone and Detail Manipulation with some modifications.

Note: tone mapping requires a lot of memory (RAM) and is CPU-intensive.

Getting the preview to match the saved image
The effects of this tool highly depend on the size of the input image in the engine's toolchain. To keep the preview fast, RawTherapee feeds each tool with the image you see in the preview at the same resolution as the preview, not the original, huge one (however, when you save an image, it uses the original, huge one, which is why saving takes longer). Processing a 900x600 image is much faster than processing a 7360x4912 one, for instance. The side-effects of this are that the zoomed-out preview may not match the saved image, depending on the "Edge Stopping" and "Scale" sliders.

You will find that the default values for this tool are Edge Stopping=1.40 and Scale=1.00. These values generally lead to great results, but specifically the Scale value is the one which leads to differences between the zoomed-out preview and saved image. If you set Scale=0.10 (the minimum) while tweaking your zoomed-out photo in RawTherapee, and then, just before saving it, you change it to Scale=1.00, the saved image will match the zoomed-out preview very well. Use this trick to get the preview to match the saved image. It works best when Edge Stopping is around 1.40. Remember that if you zoom the preview to 100%, it will perfectly match the saved image regardless of what slider values you use. 

Strength
This controls the strength of the overall effect. As of version 4.2.156, as you increase the strength, shadows are raised and highlights are slightly lowered in a way which aims to preserve the average luminance of the image thereby preventing the washed-out look.

Gamma
Gamma moves the action of tone-mapping to shadows or highlights.

Edge Stopping
This parameter affects sensitivity to edges. The greater it is the more likely an illumination change is to be considered an "edge". If set to zero tone mapping will have an effect similar to unsharp masking.

Scale
This control gives meaning to the difference between "local" and "global" contrast; the greater it is the larger a detail needs to be in order to be boosted. See the note above on the influence this setting has on the preview vs the saved image.

Reweighting Iterates
In some cases tone mapping may result in a cartoonish appearance, and in some rare cases soft but wide halos may appear. Increasing the number of reweighting iterates will help fight some of these problems. When more than zero reweighting iterates are used, the best results will be had if the edge stopping parameter is set to one (technical detail: this results in a 1-norm approximation of the smoothness using iteratively reweighted least squares). Artifacts in high contrast edges may begin to appear when this value is set to about 1.8 or higher.