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Inspiring
July 15, 2011
Question

What is "Proof Colors" option for?

  • July 15, 2011
  • 2 replies
  • 66581 views

In PS  CS4, under View, there's Proof Setup, which allows you to view soft proofing, so you can set it for your lab's profiles, so you know about how it will be printed.

However, underneath Proof Setup, is "Proof Colors". What is that for? It's only off/on, no other settings for that. It can't be, that the Proof Setup is turning the "Proof Colors" on or off so you can see how the lab will print it, because the colors change whether "Proof Colors" is checked or not. However, when it's UNCHECKED, and I go into change a potential Proof Colors choice (say from my lab's profile to Nikon's profile), the color of the photo changes, and the Proof Color now has a check in front of it.

So....what's that for, and how do you work that?

    2 replies

    Noel Carboni
    Legend
    July 15, 2011

    It allows you to simulate what your image would look like if interpreted directly in the color space you set, rather than transformed using its profile and a device's profile.  It can also provide you a preview of CMYK color separations.

    View - Proof Setup sets the profile you want to simulate or "test" with, and checking Proof Colors enables the "test", overriding normal display color management.  Proof Colors is automatically checked (enabled) when you set a profile in Proof Setup as a convenience feature.

    You would normally want to use Photoshop with Proof Colors UNchecked, so that the colors ARE automatically transformed to those needed by your monitor per its profile.  This helps ensure that you'll see them accurately.

    Photoshop's Help facility has some additional detail for this.

    -Noel

    TerryLn22Author
    Inspiring
    July 16, 2011

    Well this is truly annoying. When Proof Colors is checked, I think I'm good to go. Then a few photos and 1 hour later, I find out it's turned itself off, and I have to redo all the work. You have to remember to turn it on for each and every photo. That's ridiculous.

    Is there some way to lock it in on or off position? I don't see a way to do that.

    c.pfaffenbichler
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 19, 2011

    All they have to do, which is illegal to do of course, is to spell out color management as though they were talking to a friend. But that's illegal. By law, it has to be a really, really difficult. Plus those who write books, have to make them 534 pages long, to make themselves look really, really smart.


    Jeff, if you work with Photoshop professionally just accept that you have to learn some stuff and, to me at least, it does not seem to be Adobe’s obligation to come after you with spoonfuls of knowledge sized to your current liking.

    To stick to the car-analogy: Did the manufacturer of your car teach you how to drive or did you learn that from someone else?

    c.pfaffenbichler
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    July 15, 2011

    It does too turn the preview on and off, but when a Proof Setup is selected it is automatically turned on.