> However is there a way to "replicate " what the camera is doing through dark 
> table

Technically yes, but you'll need a color target, which is pricey.

There is so much possibility with the raw file that it'd be a waste for 
darktable to just try and approximate the in-camera jpeg. 

If you just want the camera jpeg, then shoot in only jpeg or raw + jpeg.

-m

On May 1, 2021 10:43:09 AM PDT, "Ramnarayan.K" <ramnaraya...@gmail.com> wrote:
>Hi Berhard
>
>On Sat, 1 May 2021 at 22:59, Bernhard <darkta...@intervalsignals.org>
>wrote:
>
>>
>> this is simple: what you see in-camera is the in-camera-jpg provided
>by
>> the in-camera-engine.
>> These in-camera-jpg are embedded in the raw also and can be extracted
>> using exiftool
>>
>> https://exiftool.org/examples.html
>>
>> exiftool -b -JpgFromRaw -w _JFR.JPG -ext NEF -r .
>>
>>
>> darktable reads the raw data and expects YOU to work with them
>>
>> Thanks - so 1 method would be to extract the JPEG and use that
>avoiding
>all the Raw processing
>
>or maybe my bad photography skills are being hidden by the camera :-)
>
>will read up the inks
>
>However is there a way to "replicate " what the camera is doing through
>dark table
>
>ram
>
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