Value4Realty wrote: ... The Color profile is Untagged CMYK. It never changes to RGB no matter what I do. edit: In what color mode is your document? What does it say after the name of the document on the document title bar? RGB or CMYK? Did you try File > Document Color Mode > RGB edit2: Have in mind that changes in color settings affect only new and untagged documents not already created documents with color profiles. If you are talking about the color profile of the image, then probably it is because it's a linked image (not embedded). Select the image and look at the properties bar at the top of your screen under the main application menu. Do you see Embed and Edit Original buttons not dimmed? If so, click Embed and it will convert it to RGB and the document profile. Illustrator can't modify linked images, you have to edit those in the original program, remove the profile there, and save again. When you say the Adobe logo in Illustrator doesn't exactly match the logo in Adobe.com I'm assuming that you mean certain web browser using the same monitor as Illustrator. If so, the color difference can only come if the web browser is not using the same monitor and image color profiles as Illustrator for displaying on screen. Anyway, when the color profile of the image is the same as the color profile of your monitor, (In Illustrator, untagged documents and embedded images are displayed with the current working space), then color managed programs like Illustrator display uncorrected color the way your monitor is capable of displaying colors. For example the color R 153 G 0 B 0 encoded in the file will be displayed on screen by your video card using the same color values. If the color profile of the monitor is different from the color profile of the image, color managed programs will use different RGB numbers in the video card for display on screen to compensate for the difference. In other words, your monitor using its own color space will be used to simulate a different color space. If you monitor is calibrated and profiled properly this allows for correct display of intended colors. For example if you and other users have properly calibrated and profiled monitors, by choosing a common standard color space like sRGB, all of you will see the same colors on your different systems. In case some monitors are with narrower color space than sRGB, the closest match will be used. When you display images without color management (uncorrected) color, the colors are the way your monitor is displaying them and may not be at all what others will see on their monitors.
... View more