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Hello,
Illustrator is showing dull colors in RGB mode of imported images.
It doesn't matter if it's a screenshot that is pasted in Illustrator or an image that has been drag-and-dropped into illustrator (same happens with the Place option). The colors of the image always come out dull compared to the original that has been found online.
I didn't have this issue on my old laptop (Asus N551JX with Win 10). The colors have always been accurate. I got this issue only on my new laptop (Asus ROG Zephyrus G15 with Win 10).
Unfortunately, this issue is also present in Photoshop. I'm using the same color settings as on my old laptop (shown below), but for some reason, the colors aren't managed in the same way.
Does anyone here have a clue on what could be causing this issue and how to solve it?
Thank you!
When I went to Settings > Display, I've been able only to see ASUS as the profile.
Then I went to the bottom of the Display settings window and opened Additional display settings. Then in the new window went to Graphic cards settings for monitor 2. In the new window I clicked on the third card called Color management. In another new window I chose, under Device, the Generic PnP Monitor. The only profile available there was ASUS_GA503QM... But it was possible to add new profile so I added sRGB.
Unf
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You have a specific monitor profile and are not using it for the proof preview. Check the relevant options in the View menu and also check your system screen settings.
Mylenium
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Thank you everyone for the tips and suggestions! I tried to calibrate it, went through all settings and everything was set as on the screenshots Anubhav provided. Unfortunately the issue was still there.
However, as Mylenium mentioned to check the options in the View menu, I clicked on Proof Setup on noticed that it was set to Working CMYK, even though the document is in RGB mode.
After setting it to Monitor RGB, the colors are as they should be, for imported and screenshotted images.
What is bothering me however is that it seems as if it isn't using sRGB, but the monitor's profile.
This ASUS_GA503QM... appears where the document's name is displayed.
ASUS_GA503QM is the laptop, but the Illustrator window is opened on my BenQ monitor. Is the monitor now using the laptop's profile?
This makes me worry because I'm afraid that, when creating graphics for my clients, I might see one color on my display thinking that this is how the colors should be, but the client might see completely different colors on their monitor š
Is there any way to get around this and make sure we both see at least very similar colors? I know that it's difficult and almost impossible to achieve the same color across all monitors, displays, and devices.
Also, when going to Proof Setup's settings, it's possible to choose sRGB or BenQ LCD profiles.
The colors are still different from images I see online (e.g. opened in Chrome or Brave browser). I wonder now which profile should be used now?
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You are using "Monitor RGB" as your proofing profile.
Try sRGB.
There's a Color Management training on LinkedIn Learning. You might want to watch it (it's not for free, but some public libraries provide LinkedIn.
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I'll try to find this training, thanks for the suggestion. Did you mean that I'm using Monitor RGB as a proofing profile only in Illustator (or other Adobe products) or generally on my PC? I went to Windows settings and am able only to pick the ASUS profile on the dropdown menu. There aren't any other profiles to choose. Can I download an sRGB profile from the internet and install it?
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As a setup in your system you will need to use an individual profile for your monitor. Best would be to calibrate the monitor.
In Illustrator for the proof you need to use the profile that will be used in the output. Which in the case of printing is the profile the printing service uses and in the case of screen design it usually is sRGB.
sRGB should be installed in your system already.
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When I went to Settings > Display, I've been able only to see ASUS as the profile.
Then I went to the bottom of the Display settings window and opened Additional display settings. Then in the new window went to Graphic cards settings for monitor 2. In the new window I clicked on the third card called Color management. In another new window I chose, under Device, the Generic PnP Monitor. The only profile available there was ASUS_GA503QM... But it was possible to add new profile so I added sRGB.
Unfortunately, I wasn't able to choose a new profile also for the BenQ monitor as the Add option is disabled in this case.
However, after setting the sRGB as the profile as the default one, all colors appear as they should also on the BenQ monitor. Also, in the Display settings, it is now possible to choose between sRGB and ASUS_GA503QM... profiles which previously wasn't the case.
After opening Illustrator I'm getting the color that I've been previously getting on my old laptop so I assume everything is fine now. Thank you, your answers helped a lot š
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You're welcome - glad you could solve it.
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Hello @nikola.m,
Sorry to hear about this experience. As suggested by Mylenium, I would request you to check and re-calibrate your display by following these steps in order:
Now click on the link for Display Adaptor properties.
- Find the brightness controls on your monitor and adjust the brightness higher or lower until you can distinguish the shirt from the suit with the X barely visible.
- Find the contrast controls on your monitor and set it as high as possible without losing the ability to see the wrinkles and buttons on the shirt.
- Move the Red, Green, and Blue sliders to remove any color cast from the Gray bars.
Note: You can optionally start the ClearType tuner at the end of this calibration to make text on-screen more legible.
After the calibration is complete, kindly restart the computer and then check if the colors are consistent with Windows on your Adobe apps.
Looking forward to your response.
Thanks,
Anubhav
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Can you open the image file in an image editing application such as Photoshop and does it show as expected?
If so: Convert it to Adobe RGB color space and then save it including the color profile. Set up Illustrator so that it shows all the profile warnings. WHen the warning pops up, make sure you preserve the profile.