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Color management issues

Community Beginner ,
Mar 15, 2016 Mar 15, 2016

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Hello,

Im a photographer and recently switched to CC, as well as a new iMac, I had everything set up just fine on the other computer, now I'm having issues with the color on my images, it seems that the color is completely off when sharing images on my blog/facebook or even printing, its not the same color I see on my screen. Im a bit confused as far as how to solve this issue.

Any advice will be greatly appreciated!

Delfina

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Advisor , Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

>> color is completely off when sharing images on my blog/facebook

you probably mean on the new monitor it looks too red on your blog or facebook

that's probably due to

  1. the uploading process deletes the embedded profile, or
  2. you are not converting to sRGB before uploading, or
  3. or the upload process is making an assumption about your document space and doing a conversion
  4. you are not including an embedded profile, and/or
  5. you are not using a color-managed web browser

this link is dated but may be useful

WIDE GAMUT ADOBE RGB LCD Monitors Screens Troubleshooting Over Saturated sRGB Color Reviews on the Web Tutorial

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LEGEND ,
Mar 15, 2016 Mar 15, 2016

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Adobe Employee ,
Mar 16, 2016 Mar 16, 2016

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Moving to Color management

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Community Expert ,
Mar 16, 2016 Mar 16, 2016

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If you have one of the new iMacs with DCI-P3 gamut display - which is a variety of wide gamut - the normal caveats apply: You must view in a fully color managed environment, and you must calibrate and profile the display. Anything not color managed will appear oversaturated on screen because it assumes an sRGB-type display.

Standard color management troubleshooting:

  1. Does the image have an embedded document profile?
  2. Do you have a valid monitor profile set up at system level (where the application will find it)? And for print, do you have the correct paper/ink profile in the print dialog?
  3. Are you using color managed software that will read both these profiles and properly convert from 1 into 2?

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Mentor ,
Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

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What computer did you have before?  What OS?  Which CS?  Was your previous monitor calibrated?  Have you matched your work spaces from previous to new applications?  Are you using the same printer as before?  If so, what brand and model number?  When you say the images are "completely off", what do you mean?  Is there a color cast?  Too bright?  Too dark?  As you can see, there are many variables that can affect color.  I would start by trying to match everything with what you had been using in the previous computer, because you found those images acceptable.  There is something somewhere that has changed, including your monitor settings and whether it has been calibrated or not.  White point could have a dramatic affect on color.

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Advisor ,
Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

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when an ICC profile is absent or ignored in a document opened in Photoshop (or any color-managed app), its color management system or module must make an assumption (assign a profile for all practical purposes) BEFORE it converts the document colors to the monitor space for 'accurate' proofing on the monitor

likewise, when an ICC profile is absent or ignored in a document opened in Photoshop (or any color-managed app), its color management system must make an assumption (assign a profile for all practical purposes) BEFORE it converts the document colors to the print space for 'accurate' proofing on the substrate

the source ICC profile is independent of the monitor and print spaces (profiles) - hopefully

my point is you need to be sure Photoshop is using or applying the correct document profile BEFORE Photoshop can display or print it faithfully

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Advisor ,
Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

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when an RGB document (or object) is opened in an un-color-managed application -- its RGB numbers are typically sent straight through to the monitor with no internal attempt to correct the color for monitor proofing

this effect is easy to prove and observe in Photoshop:

download a copy of the Photodisc PDI Whacked RGB target jpg

http://www.gballard.net/photoshop/pdi_download/#downloads

see the directions there to open the target using the embedded profile

downloading and testing the ProPhotoRGB version might be easier for you to see my point

once the PDI document is opened correctly, View> Proof Setup> Monitor RGB (to simulate "softproof" how the un-color-managed app will display the colors), but don't forget to toggle it back off

monitorRGB.jpg

my point is: you need to get a working knowledge for how your apps deal with profiles and configure your print utility to make a proper conversion to your print profile

for color management to work optimally, all your profiles need to be 'accurate' for their proofing spaces

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Advisor ,
Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

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>> color is completely off when sharing images on my blog/facebook

you probably mean on the new monitor it looks too red on your blog or facebook

that's probably due to

  1. the uploading process deletes the embedded profile, or
  2. you are not converting to sRGB before uploading, or
  3. or the upload process is making an assumption about your document space and doing a conversion
  4. you are not including an embedded profile, and/or
  5. you are not using a color-managed web browser

this link is dated but may be useful

WIDE GAMUT ADOBE RGB LCD Monitors Screens Troubleshooting Over Saturated sRGB Color Reviews on the W...

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Community Beginner ,
Mar 17, 2016 Mar 17, 2016

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Thanks a lot to everyone suggestions, I calibrated my new iMac again and found that the blue link at the bottom of the window in ACR was set to rgb 98 and I want it sRgb I solved the issue and now my images look good!

Thanks again!

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