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Macbook M1 Air with HDR monitor: 30 bit option greyed out in Photoshop

New Here ,
Nov 19, 2021 Nov 19, 2021

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I have Macbook M1 Air with 8GB and 256SSD attached to a BenQ SW271 in HDR mode. MacOS recognizes and activates the monitor correctly as a HDR display, but Photoshop (current 2022 version) shows the 30bit display option greyed out. Is Photoshop able to support the full color spectrum of my SW271 on the M1 Macbook? How?

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correct answers 1 Correct answer

Adobe Employee , Nov 23, 2021 Nov 23, 2021

The following things need to be set in order to view HDR on Mac:

1. In System Prefs > Displays choose a Preset that supports HDR (P3-500 or greater, I'm using P3-1600)

2. In Photoshop go to Preferences > Technology Previews > and enable Precise color management for HDR display

3. Quit and re-launch Photoshop and should be able to see HDR images displayed correctly to screen

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Community Expert ,
Nov 19, 2021 Nov 19, 2021

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Use SwitchResX to test and see if the monitor that's connected is displaying billions of colors mode i.e. outputting a 10-bit signal. That's probably the issue.  Check to see which of the cables used supports the highest bit depth and make sure that is what your using.  Hopefully that helps!

ICC programmer and developer, Photographer, artist and color management expert, Print standards and process expert.

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New Here ,
Nov 23, 2021 Nov 23, 2021

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Hi Bob, thanks for your advice. Fortunately, the cable is not an issue and SwitchResX shows a billion colors. Unfortunately, Photoshop does not. Any idea where to look?

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Community Expert ,
Nov 23, 2021 Nov 23, 2021

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Try this: in PS prefs / general. Click Reset Preferences on Quit and restart Photoshop 

ICC programmer and developer, Photographer, artist and color management expert, Print standards and process expert.

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Participant ,
Sep 17, 2023 Sep 17, 2023

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This solution worked for me. I have a 2022 Mac Studio M1 Ultra 64 core GPU, 128GB. I recently purchased a Dell UP3221Q 32" 4k 10-bit HDR monitor.  In Photoshop 2023 and 2024, a 16-bit .psd with a gradient in it would only render in 8 bit (I could tell b/c of the "stepping" or aliasing in the gradient).  That same .psd file, when brought into Premiere, was smooth (ie: showing up as 10-bit).  The monitor is properly reading as "Billions" in SwitchResX. In Photoshop, Settings > Performance > Advanced Settings, "30 bit display" was grayed out and unchecked.  After resetting preferences, it is still grayed out, but it is checked, and that exact same 16-bit .psd is now smooth when viewed in Photoshop.

 

Adobe, why this is a checkbox if it's always going to be grayed out?  Surely this is a bug, right?  Trashing preferences shouldn't be necessary to change whether Photoshop is going to use 30 bit GPU color, right?

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Adobe Employee ,
Nov 23, 2021 Nov 23, 2021

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The following things need to be set in order to view HDR on Mac:

1. In System Prefs > Displays choose a Preset that supports HDR (P3-500 or greater, I'm using P3-1600)

2. In Photoshop go to Preferences > Technology Previews > and enable Precise color management for HDR display

3. Quit and re-launch Photoshop and should be able to see HDR images displayed correctly to screen

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Contributor ,
Dec 31, 2021 Dec 31, 2021

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How is this done on windows? 

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Community Beginner ,
Mar 27, 2022 Mar 27, 2022

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This answer does not seem to be applicable to the M1 Mini. There are no "presets" in the "System Prefs > Display" section. I assume you mean for the ICC profile? I really didn't see any evidence of a preset for the M1 Mini.

That said, I have copies of Photoshop 2020, 2021, and 2022 on my M1 Mini. Both 2021 and 2022 gray out the 30 bit option. Nothing I have done so far will change that. They also display a 10 bit PSD of a gradient with lots of steps.

However, the 2020 version does NOT gray out the 30 bit option. And it displays the 20 bit PSD of the gradient quite smoothly.

So, this shows that Photoshop *can* enable 30 bit for a Mac M1 Mini. However, the newer versions of Photoshop cannot do it.

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Participant ,
Sep 17, 2023 Sep 17, 2023

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I just want to jump in here and point out that HDR and 10 bit (aka "30 bit") are 2 different things, and not necessarily related, at least in the sense that there are plenty of 10-bit monitors which are not HDR.  (And of course it's also possible to have an 8-bit HDR monitor).  But I digress.  Point is, as I commented above, trashing Photosohp preferences finally fixed the problem for me, at least in the sense that Photoshop is now properly showing 30 bit color.  It does not fix whatever bug makes the 30-bit check box grayed out.

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