Skip to main content
roberts82307609
Participant
June 14, 2023
Answered

Dull / washed out colors across programs

  • June 14, 2023
  • 8 replies
  • 21473 views

I'm suddenly having an issue where the colors in all of the Adobe programs I use (Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign) are dull and washed out. The only program that seems to display the colors correctly is Acrobat. I work almost exclusively in CMYK because my work is all print work. 

 

I have not changed any settings and I checked to make sure my color settings were the same as they have always been: North America General Purpose 2. It also says that setting is synchronized across CC programs.

 

I believe this is a bug on how the programs are just displaying the colors because all of my settings seem correct and the colors are the same ones I've used before, they just look duller. I can simply save a file out of Photoshop or Illustrator as a PDF, and it displays perfectly when opened with Acrobat. I also haven't had an issue with the colors once they are printed.

 

I've tried a few fixes I found while searching online, like resetting colors in Bridge (which I never use), turning off the GPU performance, and updating or reverting the programs to different versions. All to no avail. All programs are currently up to date, but the problem persists. Any suggestions?

Correct answer davescm

Hi

Changing to the sRGB profile is not showing accurate colour but it is not as inaccurate as your previous, broken, profile. Yes , sometimes broken profiles are delivered with system updates.

 

The monitor profile is a description of the way your particular monitor with its current adjustments (such as brightness and contrast) display colour. Colour managed applications use that profile to translate the colour values in the document to those being sent to the display, in order to show as accurate colour as possible within the limitations of a particular monitor. If the monitor profile is incorrect then the display colour is incorrect. So whilst using the sRGB profile looks better than before, and confirms the old profile was indeed broken, accurate colour display requires a monitor profile that describes your particular monitor in its current state. The only real way to create such a profile is with a hardware calibration and profiling device such as those made by Calibrite which have superceded the older i1Display devices.

 

Dave

8 replies

Known Participant
October 2, 2024

In Photoshop: Edit > Color settings > Settings > and choose "Monitor color"

This worked for me. In Photoshop, colors will be displayed the same way they are displayed in other programs on your PC.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
October 2, 2024

@Irakli Topuria 

That is a wrong and misleading answer in every possible way.

 

What that does is turn off all display color management. It dumbs down Photoshop to the level of any simple consumer-level image viewer.

 

Photoshop is more sophisticated than that. You don't seem to understand what color management does. By applying icc profiles and color management, the file is correctly represented on screen. All those other applications that you refer to are wrong! Photoshop is right.

 

You just need to make sure your profiles are in order. It's not complicated at all (despite the popular myth), it just takes some very basic and simple precautions.

 

 

Zesty_wanderlust15A7
Known Participant
June 19, 2023

[Win 10] I've had a similar [cursing removed] some days ago after calibration, so calibration is not the magic trick...

A red car would look orange in PS.

Whatever I did did not fix it, or only for seconds.

There are many reports about this on the internet. Anything I tried didn't work.

What eventually worked is to keep at least two profiles in this view. I first added the sRGB, then my new and a previous one I know had worked. If I select the correct one last (and set as default), it sticks and looks correct. Should I remove the other two or the sRGB, I'm probably[cursing removed] again, which doesn't make sense.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 19, 2023

What calibrator are you using? You should normally not need to go into that Windows dialog at all, much less "add" any profiles. The calibrator will set it all up - if it doesn't, it's not working.

 

If you do go in to check, only one profile needs to be there, and that's the one describing the actual and current response of the monitor. The profile is a map, and like any map it needs to describe the actual terrain.

 

Most problems people get with calibration, is that they do something when they shouldn't.

 

Note that if the profile is changed on system level, you have to relaunch Photoshop. It loads the profile at application startup, and keeps using that profile for the remainder of the session.

davescm
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 20, 2023

"The Eizo EV 2436 was in fact a splendid monitor with a first rate panel. It would show any current Dell or BenQ where to set the bar. I had one myself."

Wow. Cool 🙂  I ran all the tests on the Eizo site some hours ago, and a few do not come out so well, so I'm set on a new one anyway. Or I'll decide after a proper "advanced" calibration.

 

"So when my income started to improve I got into the Coloredge series, and that's where I've been since."

That was my first thought, but it's really way too much with alternatives like the BenQ out there, and suspecting I may add a HDR 4K one when they are established at better prices.

 

Re. "I would strongly advise to not shift screen brightness!"

You mean to not use things like f.lux?  Intuitively I agree, as the constant up and down regulation in my mind may be wearing things out and/or may indeed cause instability.

OTOH, I can't live w/o it, and wearing orange glasses has too many drawbacks as well... I was therefore hoping if there is some browser I can set to orange somehow. I'm used to that and it doesn't bother me at all. If I could take off its brightness in ways, I would not have to literally have brightness dialed down by f.lux or the monitor itself. Using 3000K most of the day (on non-PS apps), I assume it does have to dial things down...

 

"From your description it sounds like you just have brightness set too high. Do the paper white test! Paper white is what you should see on screen. That's pretty dim."

I still have to recalibrate using "advanced" which will probably fix a few things.  I thought the fact that mine can only reach 48 candela anymore by definition would mean it's not bright enough...

I don't know how you can get "paper" when many tuts advise 100–120 candela. Luckily I saw Glyn's 60, who is very happy with that for his personal printing. My intention re. printing is just to be ok(great) when sending to a service bureau for "regular photos." When I did that many years ago, I was already very pleased with the result (and always asked to do no corrections).

 

"HDR isn't a gimmick as such [...]"

I have decided to not go for such monitor yet, although it does seem you can use it for everything. You of course don't use HDR versions when preparing for a print. As most seem to be 4K and I don't want to edit on 4K, I may later buy an established HDR 4K as an extra, helping to see how stuff looks on there and in HDR when I want to.

 

I now understand how some monitors can self-calibrate, but I'm still not clear on what the difference is with my monitor and one that boasts "hardware calibration."  Does it mean the software connects to the monitor's hardware instead of going via the video card?


Hardware calibration means that the calibration information (which is created before profiling) is loaded into the monitor itself rather than into the video card. The advantage is that the full communication bandwidth is retained between the video card and the monitor regardless of the calibration.

 

I use Eizo CS monitors (two CS2731s). They do not have built in calibration devices but use the same Color Navigator software as the CG monitors, abeit with the need to plug in a sensor (I use the i1 Display Pro).

 

The Navigator software allows calibration to various targets in terms of brightness and color, and when switching between them, both the hardware calibration data in the monitors and the associated monitor profile are both changed automatically.

 

I have mine set to 100cd/m2 and D65 for general editing with gamma 2.2 and native monitor RGB gamut. That suits my own environment. But I can easily switch to paper matched calibrations, or to video standards such as Rec.709 for different purposes. Up to 10 calibration/profile settings can be stored for each monitor, so you can set up a screen mode for typing and reading that is different to that you want to use for image editing.

The big thing with the Eizo monitors, aside from being 10 bit/channel for smooth gradients, is that they are uniform across the screen. Many cheaper monitors are not - just put up a uniform grey background and see what it looks like corner to corner. For my use, that ranks far higher than a need for HDR at present.

 

Dave

NB, colourmanagement
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 19, 2023

In case anyone else has this issue here's an explanation of a test that may help and often does:

display profile issues on Windows

 

Here's something to try

It'll only take a few minutes and is good troubleshooting.

 

At least once a week on this forum we read about this, or very similar issues of appearance differing between colour managed applications.

Of course you must not expect accurate colour with programs such as early versions of Windows "Photos”*, because in those early versions colour management is not implemented, so, such programs are incapable of providing accurate image display.

*Windows "Photos” does do colour management now and has for a while, but beware early versions and other apps that are non colour management compliant.

 

Unfortunately, with Microsoft hardware: Windows updates, Graphics Card updates and Display manufacturers have a frustratingly growing reputation for automatically installing useless (corrupted) monitor display profiles.

I CAN happen with Macs but with far less likelihood, it seems.]

 

The issue can affect different application programs in different ways, some not at all, some very badly.

 

The poor monitor display profile issue is hidden by some applications, specifically those that do not use colour management, such as Microsoft Windows "Photos".

 

Photoshop is correct, it’s the industry standard for viewing images, in my experience it's revealing an issue with the Monitor Display profile rather than causing it. Whatever you do, don't ignore it. As the issue isn’t caused by Photoshop, please don’t change your Photoshop ‘color settings’ to try fix it.

 

To find out if the monitor display profile is the issue, I recommend you to try temporarily setting the monitor profile for your own monitor display under “Device” in your Windows ‘color management’ control panel to “sRGB IEC61966-2.1”. (If you have a wide gamut monitor display (check the spec online) it’s better to try ‘AdobeRGB1998” here instead as it more closely approximates the display characteristics).

 

Click ‘Start’, type color in the search box,

then click Color Management.

 

[or Press the Windows key + R, type colorcpl in the box and press Enter]

 

In the Devices tab, ensure that your monitor is selected in the Device field.

 

 

You can click to ADD to add “sRGB IEC61966-2.1” (or AdobeRGB1998) if not already listed there.

Again - IF you have a wide gamut display I suggest trying “AdobeRGB1998”

 

Once it’s selected, be sure to check “Use my settings for this device” up top.

And click on “set as Default Profile - bottom right

Screenshot of Color Management Control Panel

 

Quit and relaunch Photoshop after the control panel change, to ensure the new settings are applied.

 

Depending on the characteristics of your monitor display and your requirements, using sRGB or Adobe RGB here may be good enough - but no display perfectly matches either, so a custom calibration is a superior approach.

 

If this change to the Monitor Display profile temporarily fixes the appearance issue, it is recommended that you should now calibrate and profile the monitor properly using a calibration sensor like the i1display pro, which will create and install its own custom monitor profile. The software should install its profile correctly so there should be no need to manually set the control panel once you are doing this right.

 

I hope this helps

neil barstow, colourmanagement net  - adobe forum volunteer - co-author: 'getting colour right'

google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management

 

 

roberts82307609
Participant
June 14, 2023

Ok, this is all making sense now. I wouldn't have made the connection with the monitor profile because of how Acrobat was seemingly displaying the correct colors, but now I'm understanding how the interaction between the programs and the profiles differ.

 

Always better to understand a problem than to just resolve it with someone else's solution, so thanks all for the insight and education.

 

Looks like it's finally time to invest in some calibration tools that I've been putting off.

davescm
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2023

Acrobat should be displaying exactly the same as the other apps but has had a long standing bug on Windows that still exists, where it does use the document profile but assumes the monitor is sRGB. I reported it a couple of years ago and it has not been addressed.

Dave

roberts82307609
Participant
June 14, 2023

It's ironic that bug made it seem like the only app that was displaying properly in my situation. 

jane-e
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2023

 

@roberts82307609 

 

There is a reason you kept reading to do it in Bridge. If you create settings in each individual application, the settings may or may not be synched. If you do it in Bridge, the settings apply to the other applications. You have to do it once, and the settings are synched. The thing to look for is the icon. In the image below, there are two icons at the bottom. The one on the right is broken and shows the settings vary. The one on the left shows that they are all the same. You want to see the icon on the left.

https://helpx.adobe.com/acrobat/using/keeping-colors-consistent.html

 

 

Also, be sure to read Dave's answer one more time. What you did was a test. Now you need to proceed with his final paragraph.

 

Jane

 

davescm
Community Expert
davescmCommunity ExpertCorrect answer
Community Expert
June 14, 2023

Hi

Changing to the sRGB profile is not showing accurate colour but it is not as inaccurate as your previous, broken, profile. Yes , sometimes broken profiles are delivered with system updates.

 

The monitor profile is a description of the way your particular monitor with its current adjustments (such as brightness and contrast) display colour. Colour managed applications use that profile to translate the colour values in the document to those being sent to the display, in order to show as accurate colour as possible within the limitations of a particular monitor. If the monitor profile is incorrect then the display colour is incorrect. So whilst using the sRGB profile looks better than before, and confirms the old profile was indeed broken, accurate colour display requires a monitor profile that describes your particular monitor in its current state. The only real way to create such a profile is with a hardware calibration and profiling device such as those made by Calibrite which have superceded the older i1Display devices.

 

Dave

roberts82307609
Participant
June 14, 2023

Changing to the sRGB IEC61966-2.1 profile totally worked! Will I run into any issues leaving that as my monitor profile? And what would've broken the profile in the first place, a Windows update?

 

Thank you so much, I've been pulling my hair out trying to resolve this.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2023
quote

And what would've broken the profile in the first place, a Windows update?


By @roberts82307609

 

Many monitor (and laptop) manufacturers distribute profiles through Windows Update. It's not the Windows update in itself, but the bundled manufacturer profiles. These manufacturer profiles are surprisingly often defective in various ways.

 

Just make it a habit to look over the optional Windows updates before running them. If you see a monitor profile in there, disable that update, and it shouldn't come up again.

 

The Windows default monitor profile, if no other profile is installed, is sRGB IEC61966-2.1.

 

But just to be clear, yes, the real fix for this is to use a calibrator to make a new profile.

davescm
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 14, 2023

It sounds like an issue with your monitor profile which is set in your operating system. All those applications are colour managed and use the monitor profile to correctly display colours (although if the profile is broken then they will display incorrectly). Acrobat is colour managed but there is an issue where it does not use the system monitor profile but assumes sRGB. That is why Acrobat may look OK.

 

As a test, can you type Color Management in the Windows search bar. In the dialogue that opens try setting sRGB IEC61966-2.1 as the default monitor profile (you may have to click Add first and choose it from the list). When done close the dialogue and open Photoshop. Is the display better?

 

If so, the right answer is to install a monitor profile for your monitor made with a calibration & profile device such as those from i1.

 

Dave

Rockalot
Participant
December 23, 2023

I can confirm, I was having the exact same issue and it was the colour profile my new monitors decided they should use for each program. Infuriating! Thank you so much for this.