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A community for Color Management users.
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Hey everyone, first time posting here.This issue is driving me nuts, so I made a community account just for this. Please help :')I have an .ai file that was given to me by a colleague, and that file's embedded color profile was "Display".My original color settings was "sRGB IEC61966-2.1". When copying an object from this particular file A (color profile: display) over to one newly created file B (color profile: sRGB) on my desktop, the colors on the exported PNGs are of a slightly different shade.For example, #FBEAE2 would become #FCE8E0, even though both files read the colour as #FBEAE2.So, I tried to remedy it by assigning a profile to file B. I've also tried changing my color settings to "Monitor RGB - Display" as well as "Display". Still the same, somehow the color from file A was just slightly richer compared to file B. Then file A starts giving me this warning upon opening. I am puzzled.1) What could be the original embedded "Display" profile? Shouldn't it be the same as min
I am developing an app for Android devices using the raylib library. I have used the color.adobe.com website on my Windows notebook computer to generate a palette - a series of colors that “go together”. However, when I display one of the colors in my app that is connected to my Red Hat Enterprise Linux notebook, it appears to my eyes more brownish. I have a quite a bit of C/C++ development experience, but relatively little experience with digital color issues. I’ve consulted my “A Field Guide to Digital Color” by Maureen Stone, which seems to have good information, but nothing that I’ve been able to apply to this specific issue.Has anyone had a similar experience? If so, is it just that my eye is seeing the same color differently? Is it a Windows vs. RHEL display issue? Something else?Thank you for your time in reading this, and I am very grateful for any suggestions anyone has in what the issue is or if there is an issue at all, and how I might best proceed.The hex code for th
Greetings,I have used Lightroom Classic and Photoshop before that for a very long time. So for years I used my i1Pro2 meter and i1Profiler software to calibrate and generate icc profiles for my windows PC’s. I hope this is the right place to post this question on the forums. Now I have a shiny new Asus OLED PA32UCDM ProArt monitor. Although this is Calman factory calibrated, I am doing a “check” hardware calibration of this new monitor in wide gamut mode with a new meter and Calman software. It will write to the monitor LUT, however it does not generate an icc profile to install in windows. From my recollection, since I am using the ProPhoto colorspace in Lightroom and Photoshop, it utilizes the icc profile to translate the colorspace requested to the current state and capabilities of the monitor. After I do my hardware calibration the monitor will be very well calibrated. But it will be running with the default installed icc that does not really know the current status of the cali
Not sure what's going on, but recently I have found out something is wrong with PS CMS.I have my color settings synchronized to all Adobe apps, hardware selfcalibrated Eizo monitor (CN7). I dare to say I have everything setup correctly.So I guess I should see colors same in Photoshop, InDesign and Acrobat. But that is not true.I can see same image in Photoshop more green (cyan), than displayed in InDesign and Acrobat - they are displaying colors correctly and print is corresponding to what I see in InDesign and Acrobat.When I try to edit photo to look good in PS, it is then too saturated in INDD and ACR, and also to saturated on prints. No matter if images are Adobe RGB or CMYK, still same problem.Same data, same color values, synchronized color settings, but different look.So I can't believe Photoshop much now.Any idea what could be wrong? Do I miss anything?
Is it possible to disable color management in Postscript driver PS3 for canon advance ir c5051?
Hi,I'm trying to use the ACPU to print a Fotospeed Colour Management test chart onto various papers so that I can submit to have custom ICC profiles created.I'm on a MacBook running Sequoia 15.6.1 After selecting the printer (Canon Pro-310) paper type, paper feed and print quality I click 'Print' but then immediately get an error popup as shown below.Screenshot 2025-12-08 at 13.10.36.pngIf I click 'OK' then it goes on to print, but I'm concerned that the printed image may not be absolutely correct and suitable for profiling. Does anyone have any idea what is causing this, whether it's actually and issue and, if so, how to resolve?Thanks
Fellow PS Users,I do a lot of printing from PS. have been for a couple of decades. Monitor Calibrated. I use the paper profiles. Epson Papers on Epson R2880.After I have upgraded to PS 2026 from 2025, it seems that my images have turn out as cold color prints. I have to add a lot of warmth to the image to barely get close. If I take the oriingal image and print it thru Lightroom Classic, it is perfect without any changes. Same paper, Same printer, Same monitorWhat happened during the upgrade to 2026 that would have caused a change like this? What suggestions do you have to help me? ThxMG
In Photoshop, when I select Photoshop Manages Colors in the Print dialog, I see a long list with these Arri, Aces and Rec ICC profiles (like ARRI LogC3) In the Printer Profile list in the Photoshop Print Settings dialog. How did they get there? Where can I find them on my Mac, they aren’t printer profiles and I do not see them in the usual places.
Message when I try to print:"An error occurred while getting the printer's and the system's default color profile"iMac 2023, Tahoe, Epson Stylus Photo 1500w, TIFF
Hi everyone, I'm currently preparing a bunch of book illustrations for print. The printing shop gave me the right ICC-Profiles, which I have converted my art to, and then exported with this profile embedded. I have done this with my usual programme, Clip Studio Paint.Then I wanted to make sure the images look right when printed - I expect the print shop will be using Photoshop - so I downloaded the trial version of Photoshop and opened my file there. To my surprise, it looked off - too saturated and bright. It loses depth in the dark areas.Everywhere else - including Windows Photo Viewer, IrfanView etc. - it looks just as in my original graphic programme. It's only Photoshop that looks off. I've tried everything, made sure the colour settings were proper, that it opened with the embedded profile, etc. I've looked for similar posts on the Adobe forums or elsewhere online, and the prevalent statement seems to be "Photoshop is the only colour managed programme, so what that show
The basic printer profiles seem to be missing when I am trying to print to the Epson SC-p800. I selected Photoshop controls printing. Only a few paper profiles show up. The basic ones such as Premium Luster, Glossy, etc. don't show up only 3 for legacy papers. The luster one was there only a few weeks ago (before the holidays - I used it). Last night I uninstalled the printer and reinstalled the driver software but that did not fix the problem.
I am trying to figure out a way to assign a custom DNG profile by way of an action in photoshop so that I can save it as a Droplet. The issue I am running into is that the only way to use custom DNG profiles is by opening a new raw file, using the Camera Raw editor to assign the profile, and then opening the image in photoshop. I can record this through use of an action, but it records it as an "open" command and locks it into opening that one specific file, so when I try to create a droplet with this action, regardless of what image I drag onto the droplet it just opens the original source file that I created the action with. I also looked into creating an action with the Camera Raw Filter, but the Camera Raw Filter does not allow you to assign custom DNG profiles to your image since they are already rendered and inside photoshop. Is there a way to acheive this?
Hi everyone, Apologies if the answer to my question has already been posted somewhere, but I haven't been able to find it. I'm learning how to use Photoshop CC 2015. I'm currently having a hard time trying to learn how to apply a custom made ICC profile to multiple images in one go. I can apply the color profile to them one at a time, with no problem, but cannot for the life of me work out how to apply the same profile to a batch of images, without doing them one at a time. Any help will be greatly appreciated.
Hello everyone, I want to add an .icc color profile to the list of available color profiles. I have installed the .icc file in Windows C:\Windows\System32\spool\drivers\color, restarted Illustrator but my .icc does not appear in the list. can anyone help me?
Hi,I've been writing a Colour swatch tool (in excel! hell yeah!) which allows me to pick a bunch of colours, generate complimentary colours from them, blend between 2 colours in a set number of steps and a whole bunch of other cool stuff, and then output this as a photoshop or illustrator swatch file.As part of this tool I want to be able to covert the rgb values to cmyk. There is very little information on this on the web and what there is is fairly inaccurate.For example,RGB:50,128,128Converts to CMYK 61,0,0,50 (%) using the formula found at easyrgb.com (this formula is the most prevalent one on the web/web forums)Photoshop converts these RGB values as CMYK: 80,33,48,8 (%)While these two colour values are *similar* the ones generated by the easyrgb formulas are nowhere near the photoshop values.See? stupid useless formulas. (I am aware of the differences and overlap of the two gamuts)Whilst I know that the conversion done in photoshop is done using ICC templates, and that often these
Trying to understand why the photos i process from RAW in Lightroom Classic & Photoshop look great on my (Spyder calibrated) monitor and Mac Book look washed out and devoid of colour when i upload and print using Snapfish and Photobox in the UK? I have tried looking for answers online but have not been successful at fiding a solution. Any help for a non tech savy amateur photographer would be greatly appreciated.
As a long time user of Colornavigator 6, which I always thought was a truly brilliant piece of software, I just built a new machine at work (I'm an art museum photographer) and decided this was a good time to upgrade to version 7. I have a CG246/CX240 pair at work, and a CG2730 at home. Both on Win 10 pro systems. I had it installed for precisely two days before I gave up, uninstalled it and reinstalled 6. Colornavigator 7 is easily the most unintuitive if not counter-intuitive calibrator I have ever used. What were they thinking? I had to RTFM not once, but three times before I discovered that it was, in fact, still possible to create your own calibration targets. You'd be forgiven for concluding it's no longer possible, so deeply is it buried inside nonsensical, ill-labeled submenus. This used to be right up front - as it should be, it's a core function and the reason you're using a calibrator in the first place. I only had the CG246 hooked up for this. I managed to make on
I need to convert an sRGB photo to Adobe RGB. How do I do that? I have made a lot of edits, and tried to print, and the print is too brown. I used sepia toning. Do I need to convert it?Thank you! Desmeralda
Hello, Does anyone know if there is guidance or technical doc out there on how to successfully reapply Photoshop's HDR color space when the HDR file is taken to another program with no color management workflow? For context, I typically use TIFs in this use case scenario for astrophotography programs that are lagging behind in color management. I'm working with TIFs with HDR Rec 2020 color space in 16-bit, with maximum compitatbility checked, the exif color space is rec2020.icc (linear rec2020 if 32-bit HDR color space used). However, what the best way to resave in the HDR color space and to resave as a HDR file? Any insight would be appreciated. My current thesis is that one has to change the file handling on photoshop to open all tiffs, then open the file, then export with a HDR color space and save a new file to accomplish this goal.
With the recent announcement that Adobe won't be distributing any Pantone palettes after March of this year, it is making me nervous. My company won't allow me to install non-approved software (i.e. the Pantone Connect extension) onto my computer, so I won't be able to try it out ahead of time. I read the detailed instructions on getting Pantone colors into your AI/PSD/INDD files posted in this thread: https://community.adobe.com/t5/color-management-discussions/pantone-colours-and-cc-libraries/m-p/11385408 As a creative, this process is onerous at best. Is it the same with the paid version of the software? Does anyone know if existing palettes will be wiped when software is updated? Are there any best practices that might be implemented to ease the transition? Any advice, anyone? Thanks.
hey all,I am designing something for a CD cover that is going to be printed at a print shop, They say they want their images in CMYK and prefer it in a PDF or highest quality JPEG....So I have been working in CMYK, everything looks fine in photoshop, but when I save out to a JPG the whole thing gets dark and colours get horribly over saturated. here you can see the image on the left is what happens when I save out directly from my CMYK file in photoshop. there is a big loss in detail in the darker areas and colours are over saturated. the image on the right is what I get if I convert to mode>RGB and then save the JPG. .. . .this is what I want it to look like....my problem is the print shop requests the image in CMYK, but I want them to print like it looks in the RGB versionany help would be greatfully appreciated! Thankyou!also here are the actual .jpegs as saved from photoshopthe CMYK version:and the RGB version:edit: I don't know too much about colour profiles, and the print shop
I upgraded PS Beta to V25.0.0 and tried using Generative Fill - but the action could not be completed and I received an error message "Could not complete your request because the ICC profile is invalid."Using MAC OS Ventura 13.4.1 Thanks ! Hanani
Has the 27 spot color limitation been resolved on the latest Adobe CC versions? In the past anything over 27 colors would automatically be assigned CMYK values and not hold.
Should I be using the Photography (P3-D65) profile on my Studio Display for processing in lightroom? If not which?I'd think that for photos I want to print I should be editing using the best profile for editing and that it be complementary to the color profile I use in Lightroom/Photoshop.I do not currently have the ability to calibrate my monitor.Any suggestions on the profiles I should be using?
Hi everyone, I was given a .icc profile from my printer and was told to convert to this profile after I'd finished my editing in RGB mode. I was also given the following information: General Specs for newsprint: Colour should be CMYK. When converting RGB to CMYK, use the following Photoshop settings: Ink Colour: Newsprint Dot Gain: 30% Separation Type: GCR Black generation: Light Total Ink Limit: 260% UCA: 10% I don't understand the above settings as I thought that all that information was captured in the .icc profile that I was supplied. This is my first experience in a colour managed workflow so I may be getting a bit confused. If the above settings are not in the .icc profile then where do I set them in Photoshop? Would really appreciate any advice.
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