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1

Save as dialogue embed sRGB by default

Community Beginner ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

Hey all, 

 

is there a way to set to embed sRGB by default, when using the save as dialogue?

Untitled-1.jpg

I can use "convert to profile" to convert it to sRGB, but I have to do that at every single image, which is really tiring. I had that checkbox show sRGB by default, but I reinstalled PS and now it`s defaulted to my working colour space. 

Any help is appreciated. 

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Adobe
Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

If there is an embedded profile from, say, ACR or Lightroom, or anywhere else for that matter, that profile will always override your working space. The embedded profile should follow the file wherever it goes. It's what defines the numbers as actual colors and tonal values.

 

You can't just "change" a profile. Then you have to convert, which recalculates all the numbers to preserve appearance in the new color space.

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Community Beginner ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

My working colour space is Adobe RGB.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

That wouldn't make much sense by default, particularly so for a PSD. The save as ICC profile is the active ICC profile for the document(whether embedded, assigned or assumed). As you say, an explicit, dedicated conversion would be required.

 

Now if you were saving say derivative copied files from an Adobe RGB PSD to an sRGB JPEG, then this makes sense.

 

This is why Export As or Save for Web offer a checkbox to convert to sRGB, as it makes sense in these cases as one is creating a derivative copy from a master working file.

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Community Beginner ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

Hey Stephen, not PSD, that`s only in the screenshot, I save them in jpeg.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

It would be more helpful if the screenshot was representative of the process. 🙂

 

Using export rather than save as will offer you a checkbox for automated conversion.

 

You would either need an action or script to automate the conversion to sRGB and the use of the save command, a script would be better (if there is a reason why you need to use save rather than export).

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Community Beginner ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

So for that checkbox to always show sRGB, my working colour space would have to be sRGB?

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Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

@Norbert22662379m15c wrote:

So for that checkbox to always show sRGB, my working colour space would have to be sRGB?


 

That would not account for images that have a different embedded profile, unless your colour settings were set to ignore embedded profiles, which is not recommended.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 14, 2022 Jan 14, 2022

Again, it's not about the working space. It's the color profile embedded in the file, which will override your working space.

 

If you open files from ACR or Lightroom, you set the profile there. This profile will then be preserved in Photoshop.

 

The working space only comes into play if the file doesn't have a profile. Then the working space jumps in as a default. But that shouldn't happen. There should always be an embedded profile.

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Community Expert ,
Jan 15, 2022 Jan 15, 2022

"So for that checkbox to always show sRGB, my working colour space would have to be sRGB?"

NO

that checkbox is set relative to the embedded profile in the open image file (document) 

setting the working colour space to sRGB will make no difference

 

I hope that makes sense

 

I hope this helps
neil barstow, colourmanagement net :: adobe forum volunteer
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management

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Community Expert ,
Jan 15, 2022 Jan 15, 2022
LATEST

Make sure that RGB Color Management Policies is set to Preserve Embedded profiles.

I suspect that you have it set to Convert to Working RGB, in which case all RGB files you open will be converted to Adobe RGB.

 

PS-color-settings.png

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Community Expert ,
Jan 15, 2022 Jan 15, 2022

The save dialog's embedded profile option is set relative to the image colourspace [in this case AdobeRGB (1998)]

What you seem to be hoping for, is with this Adobe RGB image open, when you come to save for that to be automatically converted during saving to sRGB [and the profile embedded]. Is that right?

Photoshop doesn't do that. 

The now deprecated (problematic) Photoshop "save for web" used to convert and embed (but not reliably), I'd not recommend it.

 

If you have a batch of Adobe RGB files and want to convert to sRGB and save, that can be done using a folder action. 

this web page might help with that

 

I hope this helps
neil barstow, colourmanagement net :: adobe forum volunteer
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management
[please only use the blue reply button at the top of the page, this maintains the original thread title and chronological order of posts]

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