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Participant
May 1, 2025
Question

Help: Photoshop colours are off

  • May 1, 2025
  • 3 replies
  • 360 views

Hi! For some reason my colours are off in Photoshop and I'm not sure why. I opened a RAW file (growlithe.png) and it loaded with this dark green background with the colours of the image saturated and off to what they usually are. I also tried opening a random PNG (lucario.png) and they're different to what the image looks like when I open it in photos. AFAIK I haven't changed any settings in Photoshop - I installed a new printer yesterday and printed through Photoshop, and was messing around with the printer colour settings etc. but I'm not sure if this would affect Photoshop as a whole? I've restarted my PC, uninstalled and reinstalled Photoshop so I'm a bit stuck on how to fix this.

3 replies

NB, colourmanagement
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 6, 2025

@Eve37268958dtus @D Fosse is right: "Uninstalling and reinstalling rarely fixes anything. What you need to do is reset preferences. This restores the application to clean factory state."

 

here's some more info on resetting preferences thoroghly:

 

(read this entire text before acting please)

 

Unexpected behaviour of Photoshop may indicate damaged preferences, which are saved when Photoshop closes.. Restoring preferences to their default settings is a good idea when trying to troubleshoot unexpected behaviours in Photoshop.

When preferences become corrupt, then various issues can occur.

 

Here’s some info from Adobe about preferences:

Learn how to access and modify Photoshop preferences and customise according to your frequent workflows

https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/using/preferences.html#reset_preferences

 

According to Adobe, manually removing preferences files is the most complete method for restoring Photoshop to its default state. This method ensures that all preferences and any user presets which may be causing a problem are not loaded. More here: https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/using/preferences.html#Manually

The process:

  1. Quit Photoshop.
  2. Navigate to Photoshop's Preferences folder.
    macOS: Users/[user name]/Library/Preferences/Adobe Photoshop [version] Settings
    Windows: Users/[user name]/AppData/Roaming/Adobe/Adobe Photoshop [version]/Adobe Photoshop [version] Settings
     
    Note: The user Library folder is hidden by default on macOS. To access files in the hidden user Library folder, see How to access hidden user library files.
  3. Drag the entire Adobe Photoshop [Version] Settings folder to the desktop or somewhere safe for a backup of your settings
  4. Open Photoshop.
     New preferences files will be created in the original location.

 

You may want to back up your settings and custom presets, brushes & actions before restoring Photoshop's preferences.

Here is general info about that:  https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/using/preferences.html#BackupPhotoshoppreferences

 

And here’s an Adobe Quick Tips link as an aid to overall understanding

https://community.adobe.com/t5/photoshop-ecosystem-discussions/quick-tips-how-to-reset-photoshop-preferences/td-p/12502668

 

Thanks to Digitaldog for this quick and simple method:

Press and hold Alt+Control+Shift (Windows) or Option+Command+Shift (macOS) immediately after launching Photoshop. You will be prompted to delete the current settings.

You can also reset preferences on quit, if Photoshop is running, by going into General Preferences>General>Reset on Quit.

This action only affects the items found in the preferences dialog box. Numerous program settings are stored in the Adobe Photoshop Preferences file, including general display options, file-saving options, performance options, cursor options, transparency options, type options, and options for plug‑ins and scratch disks. Brushes (and lots of other settings) are not affected by the above instructions for deleting preferences.

You may wish to make a screen capture of the settings in the Preferences dialog to reset them prior to deleting this file. 

 

 

 

Before you reset your preferences, in case of future issues, I suggest you make a backup copy as Adobe may need one to check problematic preferences. 

Quit Photoshop.
Go to Photoshop's Preferences folder

Preferences file locations: https://helpx.adobe.com/photoshop/kb/preference-file-names-locations-photoshop.html\


  [on MacOS see: Users/[user name]/Library/Preferences/Adobe Photoshop [version] Settings

  Note for those on macOS: - Be aware that the user Library folder is hidden by default on macOS. More on that here:

  https://helpx.adobe.com/x-productkb/global/access-hidden-user-library-files.html

  In the Finder, open the “Go” menu whilst holding down the Option (Alt) key.

  "Library" will now appear in the list - below the current user's “home” directory. ]

 

Now you can drag the entire Adobe Photoshop [Version] Settings folder to the desktop or somewhere safe as a backup of your settings.

 

 

Note for macOS:

Preference preservation is affected by macOS permissions,

You’ll need to allow Photoshop ‘Full Disk Access’ in your Mac OS Preferences/Security and Privacy

 

If resetting preferences doesn't fix your issue:

Go to Preferences > Performance... and uncheck Multithreaded Compositing - and restart Photoshop.

Is Photoshop still hanging? 

Go to Preferences > Performance... click Advanced Settings... and uncheck "GPU Compositing" - then restart Photoshop. 

 

 

 

 

It may even be time to reinstall Photoshop.

 

It’s recommended that you use the Adobe CC cleaner tool to remove all traces first.

(See above about preserving preferences first, though! It’s worth preserving them unless they are corrupted.)

How and when to use the Creative Cloud Cleaner tool | Advanced steps

https://helpx.adobe.com/creative-cloud/kb/cc-cleaner-tool-installation-problems.html

 

Uninstall Photoshop BUT make sure to choose the option “Yes, remove app preference”.

 

Once that process finishes, start the installation process and look into the “Advanced Options”. Uncheck “Import previous settings and preferences” and choose to “Remove old versions”.

 

neil barstow - adobe forum volunteer,

colourmanagement consultant & co-author of 'getting colour right'

See my free articles on colour management

Help others by clicking "Correct Answer" if the question is answered.

Found the answer elsewhere? Share it here. "Upvote" is for useful posts

 

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 1, 2025

Can you show a screenshot of Photoshop's color settings? And also explain what the problem is with the first screenshot?

quote

was messing around with the printer colour settings

uninstalled and reinstalled Photoshop


By @Eve37268958dtus

 

"Messing around", without knowing what you're doing, is a certain way to break things. It sounds like the file may not have an embedded color profile, in which case you can expect differences between applications depending on their default settings.

 

Uninstalling and reinstalling rarely fixes anything. What you need to do is reset preferences. This restores the application to clean factory state.

Community Manager
May 1, 2025

Hi @Eve37268958dtus! Welcome to the community! 😊

 

Could you share more details about the issue? Are you experiencing this color discrepancy in both Camera Raw and Photoshop, or just Camera Raw? Your screenshot only shows Camera Raw. If you were printing in Photoshop, maybe the color space was accidentally set to CMYK? CMYK is the standard for printing and it desaturates colors, while RGB is recommended for screens and can render brighter colors. You can change the mode by going to Image > Mode. Learn more here.

 

Let me know if this helps!

Alek

*(If you mention me with an @, like @Aleke, I’ll get a notification and can respond faster.)*