Color Management Settings

I'm not sure what to set my color management settings up as!  I've been told a few different things!  I shoot in Adobe RGB, but I've been told to set my working space to SRGB and then to set the color management policies to "Convert to working RGB, CMYK, and Gray."  Then I've also been told to set the working space to Adobe RGB (1998) and then under "coversion options"  change the "intent" to "perceptual."
Regardless of which setting I try to use, the coloring when I view it in Photoshop is much more yellow than when I view it on my monitor.  I have callibrated my monitor, so I'm assuming the problem is within Photoshop.  How do I fix this so that the colors match???
Thank you,
Jacalyn

I've been told to set my working space to SRGB and then to set the color management policies to "Convert to working RGB"
Yes, I'd back up what the previous poster says. Where did you get this advice? its extremely poor advice. If its valid at all, this would only apply to people doing an extremely narrow, low end type of work - destined ONLY for the internet.
'Autoconvert' in Color Settings is pretty nasty, it takes every file and converts it. And sRGB is a pretty dumb profile, I've always reckoned - as Bart says, its low gamut, designed for 'lowest common denominator' displays.
Spyder, and your monitor calibration: (because it sounds like your profile isnt being picked up) - I did some research and believe that there may be a "ProfileChooser" application somewhere on PC? - always thought  monitor profiles should be stored somewhere in PC control panels. But lord knows whats happening with these settings on PC these days. On mac it does all this much more intuitively of course.;-)
But here's a thread I found where someone had a problem similar to yours…
http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=57889

Similar Messages

  • Color management settings for the best print output

    Color Management while Printing has been one of the challenging areas which has been discussed a lot over user forums and has been a painful area in terms of clear understanding while taking print outputs.
    Here is an easy-to-understand KB (Knowledge Base) article ‘Color management settings for the best print output’ to help you get the best from your printers using PSE and bridge that knowledge gap.
    This article explains color management in Photoshop Elements, how to get better prints, and addresses some of the following issues like horizontal/vertical streaks in print output, too dark or too light print output, ICC profile problems and Color differences between prints from PSE and other applications.
    Thanks,
    Garry

    Thanks Noel.
    Yes have shared in PSE forum as well. But I usually drop such posts on PS General forum so community moderators as well as our power users who mostly use both PS or PSE or are aware about can communicate to their students, audiences etc.
    The idea is to reach out the message to as many as folks via relevant forums. Most of my otehr posts have found mentioned only on PSE forum.
    Thanks for the feedback Nice to hear such a great feedback within 5 mts of publishing
    Regards,
    Garry

  • Best Color Management Settings for Web in CS3

    I've seen tons of info on what color management settings can be used in CS3, but most seemed to favor work for printing. I'm just wondering what settings people think are best for color and B&W photo web work in particular... I already have both the monitor and PS set for 'sRGB IEC61966-2.1', but other than that, there seems to be a lot of opinions. I just want everything to have the best chance of looking the same on other comps as it did on mine. I also have Proof Setup set to 'Monitor RGB'.
    Thanks,

    1. Calibrate (I use ColorVision's Spyder http://aps8.com/spyder.html , but any hardware calibration device will be better than calibration by eye).
    2. Set the Working Space to sRGB.
    3. Set the Color Management Policy for RGB to Convert to Working to be sure you are converting content to sRGB. (2 & 3 addressses pfigen's concern about making sure all images are sRGB.)
    4. Make sure your monitor is set to use the ICC profile generated by the calibration device.
    5. Turn off Proof Colors.
    6. Embed profiles or not, but if you do use the sRGB profile. Whether it gets used or not is another story.
    As far as B&W, pfigen suggests Gamma 2.2, which would seem to be right for PC. Mac users might consider Gamma 1.8.
    This should work well for most situations, but guaranteed consistency is an impossible task at this point.

  • Need color management settings for photoshop version 8.0

    I need to reset the color management settings for photoshop 8.0. Can someone let me know what are the correct defaults?

    Probably the most commonly used is "North American Prepress 2" but which you choose depends entirely on the kind of work you are currently doing.

  • Laptop Losing Color Management Settings When Docking or Undocking

    I originally posted this to the general Windows 7 support forum; however, one of the support engineers recommended that I move it here as I'm running Windows 7 Enterprise, so here it is...
    I am running Windows 7 Enterprise SP1 64-bit on a Dell Latitude E6540 with a docking station.  I have color-calibrated the display on the laptop as well as an external display attached to the docking station.  Whenever I undock the computer, the
    system resets the color management settings and I lose the color calibration on the laptop's display.  I then have to go in manually through the Control Panel and re-apply the calibration profile to get things back to normal.
    I have everything set up so that the calibrated profile is the default profile for the system and I've verified that this is the case whether or not the machine is docked, but it still loses the calibration settings every time.  All video system drivers
    are updated and current as well.
    Any thoughts or ideas on how to resolve this issue?
    Thanks in advance for any advice.

    Sophia,
    Thanks for the link to the article.  While I still suspect that the color calibration issue is related to the Intel drivers, the only response that I'm able to get from Intel is that it is a Windows operating system problem and not theirs.
    To be clear, the issue described in this article does relate specifically to power savings, which are typically only enabled when running on battery.  I do have this particular setting disabled on my laptop in order to maintain color accuracy for
    my work.
    My issue is clearly with the Color Calibration Profiles.  The default profile for the laptop, which appears to have no actual calibration at all, has the screen showing a very heavy blue bias.  The bias is so strong, that the frames around the
    windows, ribbons in the Microsoft Office apps, etc., which should be grey, are displayed as blue.  The blue bias also tends to wash out most of the other colors and makes the screen look dull and unsaturated.  However, as soon as my Color Calibration
    Profile is used, the Windows elements display as grey and the screen colors look much more vibrant.  It really is a night and day difference.
    When booting up the system or logging into my user account, even on the default blue Windows screens, you can clearly see the change when my Color Calibration Profile is loaded by the system just before it brings up the desktop.  Once loaded, it remains
    working, as I've said, until the computer is undocked or docked.  Then it immediately reverts to the default Color Calibration Profile and the screen shifts back into the blue range again.
    I think that for another test, I'm going to remove all of the calibration profiles except for mine and see if that has any affect.  If it doesn't, I'll rename my profile to the same name as the default profile and see if that does anything.  It's
    just something that I thought of now to try.  I'll let you know how it goes.

  • Elements 10-color management settings

    Using Elements 10 with MAC; color management settings aren't available

    My understanding is in the Print Command, there should be a Color Management option that gives you two options:
    -Printer manages colors
    -Photoshop Elements manages colors
    In Print command, I don't have that option.

  • Acrobat Color Management settings not holding

    I am having issues with acrobat 8 & 9 holding the color management  preferences on the intel macs we have. I have placed the .csf file in  user/library/application support/adobe/color/settings. The .icc profile  is in user/library/color sync/profiles. We are using OS 10.5.8 &  10.6.4 both versions are behaving the same. I have used bridge to sync  the Adobe suite (AI,Photoshop and Indesign) and that works fine. Acrobat was not installed as part of the suite.

    Figured out the issue. The .csf file was corrupt, remade the file and the settings held in prefernces.

  • Problem with Epson 2400. No color management settings

    All of a sudden when I try to print from Aperture (or Photoshop) and I select "Print Settings," the window that opens only shows Printer and Presets. There is no third menu for Color Management or Print Settings — which are crucial to my printing.
    I have downloaded and installed the latest Epson driver for Leopard. Still I can't get the full menus.
    (No trouble on G4 PB with Tiger)
    I would deeply appreciate any assistance in solving this problem .
    Thanks, Susan

    Hi Susan,
    Yea, I'm having the same problem. All of a sudden I can't get the printer settings button to work to get through to colour management and advanced print settings. It means I can't set up new pre sets. Only happened in the last few days???
    Will

  • CS4 Color Management Settings - Confusing for Brother Laser Colour Printer

    I am new to Brother's Color Laser Printer and setting up the Color Management with CS4 for a document. Contacted Brother and they do not have informaton for Adobe Products. Here's what occurs when on the Print Screen:
    Under 'Options'  — CS4 has instated 'Let InDesign determine Color Management'.
    Under Printer Profile: 'RGB-SRGB 1EC6' is indicated. I can pull down the menu for other choices. Brother Printers are indicated but I have no idea which one to choose. What is difficult to ascertain is that in one project, I am using card stock. There is no choice available for other weights of paper as there is in MSW.
    Inexperience prevails with using a color laser printer with CS4's settings. In other words, should I leave the choices provided by CS4 rather than choose the Brother Printer settings that cannot be explained by Brother?
    HELP!

    What is difficult to ascertain is that in one project, I am using card
    stock. There is no choice available for other weights of paper as there
    is in MSW.
    With an RGB (no postscript) driver you would access paper and resolution profiles from the Printer... button of the Print dialog. So typically output color would be Composite RGB, Let InDesign Determine Color would be your only Color Handling choice, and you would leave the Printer Profile as Document RGB. Then you would click Print... and you would find paper and resolution settings under the Print Settings pop-up.

  • Embedding profiles, color management settings

    Greetings.
    I've calibrated my monitor, and either need photos to give to my customers on a photo cd, or sometimes I need prints. I've downloaded my lab's profiles.
    ...and that's where things get weird...
    My monitor never matches what the lab prints.
    I shoot in RAW, run my images through Phase One's 'Capture One' Pro 3.79. In there, there are some color management choices.
    There is...
    1) Camera Product, which I've set to Nikon D200
    2) Camera Profile, which I've also set to Nikon D200
    3) Output destination, which I've set to sRGB (I have no need to use RGB)
    4) Web destination, set to sRGB
    5) Proof destination, which I've set to my lab's profiles that I've downloaded
    6) Monitor profile. It is this one, that most concerns me. I can set this for sRGB, which is where it is now, or I can manually tell it to use the ICC profile that I set with my calibrator. This is a trick question, because I figured it'd be a slam-dunk to set it to the ICC profile. But I called X-rite calibrators, and he said not necessarily, and in fact, you probably want to leave that choice simply set to sRGB. He said to check with Capture One to see what they say, because with Photoshop you don't choose what monitor profile to use as it detects your ICC profile automatically. I will ask Capture One later, but wanted to hear from all of you as well (the guy from Capture One might give the wrong answer, so I'm hedging my bets).
    Then within Photoshop CS4, there are also several choices.
    1) Under Convert to Profile, since my image will be printed, I currently have the lab's profile selected.
    2) Color Settings, is set to sRGB
    3) Under Assign Profile, I currently have the lab's profile selected. Other choices, would be sRGB, the ICC profile, Capture One's settings, etc.
    So overall, there are 9 settings x 5 choices or more choices most of the time = 45 options, if not more.
    What d'yall think about what things ought to be set to? Again, sRGB is the color space I'm using.
    Thanks.

    "I've calibrated my monitor, and either need photos to give to my customers on a photo cd, or sometimes I need prints. I've downloaded my lab's profiles.
    ...and that's where things get weird...   My monitor never matches what the lab prints."
    If it's your prints not matching your screen that you're worried about, there are a few places to look, but first, how are they not matching - color, contrast, overall luminance or brightness, or something more specific? How did you calibrate your screen, which which device, and are you sure it was done right? What target values for color temp and luminance? What is your ambient light like in your editing space? How are you viewing the prints that don't match your screen - what light source for viewing?
    There's a good chance that the lab's profiles are not great as well, and do you know how well calibrated they are and how stable their chemical processes are as well.
    "I shoot in RAW, run my images through Phase One's 'Capture One' Pro 3.79. In there, there are some color management choices."
    That's a very very old version of CaptureOne, and while it was always color managed, I can't recommend strongly enough that you upgrade to the latest version. Better processing. Better features. Much faster. Just much better all 'round. I'm up to v6 now and it's one of the most productive tools I own, particularly for working with large shoots.

  • Re: Does updating the display driver affect color management settings?

    Hello everyone!
    I have received a message about the new display driver update and I have some doubts about installing it. When I installed an update for the BIOS driver, all BIOS settings returned to the default ones, but in that case it wasn't a big deal to set them again according to my needs. But I spent, probably, half a day, adjusting the color, using the color management, and I really want to keep the settings I've done. So, please, tell me, if updating the nVidia driver affects these settings and if there's any way of backuping them? Thank you very much!

    Hi,
    If you install a graphic card driver, your setting will be set by default. To be honestly, I don't see any reason to update drivers if the system runs well. I still use the same drivers I downloaded before and don't make update for new one. About backing up the settings, I don't know how to do it.Anyway, I have never thought about it.
    You are welcome, if have more questions.
    Message was edited by: Jeka-IL

  • Color Management Settings in Windows 7/Vista

    I know this is not exactly the right forum to ask, but I also know that some people very knowledgable in color managment read/write here:
    Can somebody explain to me what the setting of "Device Profile" in "Windows Color System Defaults" really does/affects:
    I've searched the web and found nothing but questions ...
    Beat

    Noel:
    I have custom calibrated with an Eye-One puck.  I was just searching around looking for a way to verify that indeed the profile was in place, concerned that it might not be, and came across this advice in the links attached to my first message. But my ultimate goal was to verify that indeed I had my monitor profile in place.
    After reading through the links, although I did tick the "Use Windows Display Calibration" I did not push the "Calibrate Display" button, recognizing that this leads to a visual calibration routine.  In the links I attached, and also:
    http://www.pusztaiphoto.com/articles/colormgmt/win7/default.aspx
    the authors are suggesting that ticking the "Use Windows Display Calibration" is a necessary step to ensure that your custom profile is loaded and remains loaded.  Although I admit that this seems illogical (hence my question) the author of the article linked above asserts that checking this box does not relate only to a visual calibration via the "Calibrate Display" button.  Indeed, in referring to the Microsoft description of this module, where it says that"Windows profile loading" should only be used in conjunction with the visual calculation function his advice his is to "[i]gnore it," indicating that the people who wrote the help article misunderstood its function.
    And, as noted above, after trying this I did notice a profile shift with my custom calibration in place, so it did pique my curiosity. In the last analysis however my ultimate goal is to know that my custom profile is properly loaded.
    Any thoughts on what is the best way to do that?
    Thanks,
    Brian

  • Color management settings for HP Photosmart d7460 printer?

    Hi,
    HP Photosmart d7460
    Windows 7 Pro 64 bit
    I have the above printer, and I have recently used Datacolor devices to manually calibrate both my monitor and printer. I notice that when, for example, I use Adobe Photoshop Elements or Corel Photopaint X4 to print photos, that I am advised to select software to handle color management. I also receive a message informing me that i should switch off printer color management in printing preferences (i.e. the printer driver software). Unfortunately the only options available in the printer driver 'color management' drop down menu appear to be either Colorsmart/sRGB or AdobeRGB. I understand that there should be another option, either 'no color management' or 'application controlled' but it is not present. There is also no option, in this menu, for the ICC profile that I have created for the printer, although the profile is present in the Adobe Photoshop Elements application, and in Corel.
    How do I switch off color management by the printer and allow the application to solely control color management? I understand that having both the application and printer control color management can lead to poor colours.
    Regards, Chris

    does anyone have any suggestions, any help appreciated.
    regards

  • When I try to export pictures of the night sky in Lightroom, they always look brighter than they are in the preview and are filled with white noise/grain. I've tried changing my color management settings, but to no avail. What can I do to fix this?

    imgur: the simple image sharer
    That's the picture^
    Also, doing noise reduction ruins the colour.
    Why can't it just export properly...

    Since it has always been very basic to backup your computer and all it's data, Apple provides no way for you to transfer music from your iPhone back to your computer.  As you know, you can re-download all iTunes purchases, but music that you ripped yourself you'll have to just re-rip again.
    You can try and find 3rd party applications that might help you.  I'm sure you'll pay, however.
    Let this be a very important lesson learned.
    Best.

  • Confused about Color Management in CS5 (Photos appearing differently in all other programs)

    I recently noticed this and it's been driving me crazy; when I view photos in Photoshop CS5 they appear significantly lighter/more washed out than when viewed in other programs like Zoombrowser, Digital Photo Professional or just in a regular Windows folder using Filmstrip mode (Windows XP).  When opening the same photo in both CS5 and Zoombrowser and switching back and forth between the two windows the difference is very apparent...for example, one of the photos I compared was of a person in a black shirt -- in CS5 (lighter/washed out) the folds in the shirt were very obvious, but in Zoombrowser (darker, more contrast/saturation) the folds were nearly invisible and it looked like just solid black.  Now, after messing around with the settings in both Photoshop and in Zoombrowser I've found a few ways to get the photos to look the same in the two programs; one way gives them both the lighter/more washed out appearance and another way gives them both the darker appearance with more contrast and saturation.  My problem is that I'm not sure which view is accurate.
    I use a NEC MultiSync LCD1990SXi monitor with SpectraView II calibration software and calibrate it every 2 weeks using these calibration settings (screenshot): http://img52.imageshack.us/img52/8826/settingsx.jpg
    In the SpectraView II Software under Preferences there's an option that says "Set as Windows Color Management System Monitor Profile - Automatically selects and associates the generated ICC monitor profile with the Color Management System (CMS)."  This option is checked.  Also, when I open the Windows' Color Management window there's only one option displayed, which is "LCD1990SXi #######" (the ####### represents my monitor's serial number).
    I assume the above settings are all correct so far, but I'm not sure about the rest.
    Here are my current default Color Settings in CS5 (screenshot): http://img97.imageshack.us/img97/666/photoshopcolorsettings.jpg
    Changing these settings around doesn't seem to make the photo appear much different.  However, when I go to Edit -> Assign Profile, then click off of "Working RGB: sRGB IEC61966-2.1" and instead click Profile and select "LCD1990SXi ####### 2011-06-21 18-30 D65 2.20" from the drop-down menu, the picture becomes darker with more contrast and saturation and matches the picture in Zoombrowser.  Also, if I select "Adobe RGB (1998)" from the drop-down menu it's very similar in terms of increased darkness and contrast but the saturation is higher than with the LCD1990SXi setting.  Another way I've found to make the image equally dark with increased contrast and saturation is to go to View -> Proof Setup -> Custom and then click the drop-down menu next to "Device to Simulate" and select "LCD1990SXi ####### 2011-06-21 18-30 D65 2.20" again.
    Alternatively, to make both images equally light and washed out I can go to Zoombrowser -> Tools -> Preferences and check the box next to "Color Management: Adjust colors of images using monitor profile."  This makes the image in Zoombrowser appear just like it does in CS5 by default.
    Like I said, I'm confused as to which setting is the accurate one (I'm new to Color Management in general so I apologize for my ignorance on the subject).
    It would seem that assigning the LCD1990SXi profile in CS5 would be the correct choice in order to match the monitor calibration given the name of the profile but the "Adjust colors of images using monitor profile" option in Zoombrowser sounds like it would do the same thing as well.  Also, I've read that Photoshop is a color managed software whereas Zoombrowser and Windows Picture and Fax Viewer are not which makes me think that maybe the lighter/washed out version seen in Photoshop is correct.  So which version (light or dark) is the accurate one that I should use to view and edit my photos?  Thanks in advance for any help or info.

    Sorry for the late reply;
    But before we go there or make any assumptions, it's important for
    you to determine whether you're seeing consistent color in your
    color-managed applications and only inconsistent color in those that are
    not color-managed.  For that you'll need to do a little research to see
    if the applications in which you're seeing darker colors have
    color-management capability (and whether it is enabled).
    I opened the same picture in 7 different applications and found that the 6 of the 7 displayed the photo equally dark with equally high contrast when compared to the 7th application (CS5).  The other 6 applications were Zoombrowser EX, Digital Photo Professional, Windows Picture and Fax Viewer, Quicktime PictureViewer, Microsoft Office Picture Manager and Firefox.
    However, at least two of these programs offer color management preferences and, when used, display the photo (from what I can tell) exactly the same as Photoshop CS5's default settings.  The two programs are two Canon programs: Zoombrowser EX and Digital Photo Professional.  Here's the setting that needs to be selected in Zoombrowser in order to match up with CS5 (circled in red):
    And here's the setting in Digital Photo Professional that needs to be selected in order to match up with CS5 (again, circled in red):
    *Note: When the option above "Monitor Profile" is selected ("Use the OS settings") the image is displayed exactly the same as when the monitor profile is selected.  It's only when sRGB is selected that it goes back to the default darker, more contrasty version.
    So with the red-circled options selected, all three programs (CS5, ZB, DPP) display the images the same way; lighter and more washed out.  What I'm still having trouble understanding is if that ligher, more washed out display is the accurate one or not...I've read several tutorials for all three programs which only make things more confusing.  One of the tutorials says to always use sRGB if you want accurate results and *never* to use Monitor Profile and another says that, if you're using a calibrated monitor, you should always select Monitor Profile under the color management settings...so I'm still lost, unfortunately.
    What I also don't understand is why, when the monitor profile is selected in CS5, the image is displayed in the dark and contrasty way that the other programs display it as by default but when the monitor profile is selected in Digitial Photo Professional it displays it in the lighter, more washed out way that CS5 displays it using CS5's default settings (sRGB).  Why would selecting the monitor profile in DPP display the photo the same way as when sRGB is selected in Photoshop?  And vice versa...why would selecting the monitor profile in Photoshop display the photo the same way as when sRGB is selected in DPP?
    I feel like I'm missing something obvious here...which I probably am.  Again, I'm very new to this stuff so pardon my ignorance on the topic.
    By the way, I find that the way that the non-color managed programs (Windows Picture and Fax Viewer et al.) display the photos is more aesthetically pleasing to the eye than the duller, more washed out display that CS5 gives the photos, but ultimately what I want to see in these programs (especially PS5 where I'll be doing the editing) is the accurate representation of the actual photo itself...i.e. what it's supposed to look like and not a darker (or lighter) variant of it.
    So just to reiterate my questions:
    Why does selecting Monitor Profile under the color management settings in DPP give the same display results as the default sRGB profile in CS5 and vice versa?  (CS5 with monitor profile selected having the same display results as DPP with the sRGB profile selected)
    When using CS5 with it's default color management settings (sRGB), using DPP with the Monitor Profile selected, and using Zoombrowser EX with "Adjust color of images using monitor profile" selected this results in all three programs displaying the same lighter, washed-out images...is this lighter, more washed-out display of the images shown in these three programs the accurate one?
    I noticed when opening an image in Firefox it had the same darker, contrasty look as the other non-color managed applications had.  Assuming that the CS5 default settings are accurate, does this mean that if I edit a photo in CS5, save it, and upload it to the internet that other people who are viewing that image online will see it differently than how it's supposed to look (i.e. in a non-color-managed way?)  If so, this would seem to indicate that they'd see a less-than-flattering version of the photo since if their browser naturally displays images as darker and more contrasty and I added more darkness and contrast to the image in CS5, they'd be seeing a version of the photo that's far too dark and probably wouldn't look very good.  Is this something I have to worry about as well?
    I apologize for the lengthy post; I do tend to be a bit OCD about these things...it's a habit I picked up once I realized I'd been improperly editing photos on an  incorrectly calibrated monitor for years and all that time and effort had been spent editing photos in a certain way that looked good on my incorrectly calibrated monitor but looked like crap on everyone else's screen, so the length and detail of this post comes from a desire to not repeat similar mistakes by editing photos the wrong way all over again.  Again, thanks in advance for all the help, it's greatly appreciated!

Maybe you are looking for

  • Indicator: Goods Receipt Message

    Hi guys, in PO in label 'Delivery/Invoice' there is flag Goods Receipt Message and it seems there is the possibility that the system is to issue an appropriate message to the buyer..it is very interesting but both in this forum and on SAP OSS I have

  • Page thumbnails are not number correclty

    I have 123 pages pdf files. The original pages on the paper are mark page 2, 4 , 6 (evenly). But my Page thumbnails are not number correclty they go from 30 -31, 1-5, whole mess. But I can view my pages in order (by 2, 4, and so on). is there a way I

  • How to call 'GET CURSOR' for another screen?

    Hi Folks, I'm displaying a modeless dialog box. It's basically a utility to enter predefined texts such as "Dear SIR," into a table control in the main screen. Since this dialog box is modeless, the user can move the cursor on the <b>main</b> screen,

  • T4i warning...

    Check your serial numbers, a health warning has been issued for T4i owners.... http://www.usa.canon.com/cusa/consumer/products/cameras/slr_cameras?pageKeyCode=prdAdvDetail&docId=0... http://www.petapixel.com/2012/07/08/the-rubber-grip-on-some-canon-t

  • Calculating/Validating with numbers or text

    Hi, I have a form with different fields (numeric and text) The user has to enter results of a test in this fields. In case of numeric results I use a script to validate that the result is within a specified range. Sometimes the user must fill in a te