why the photo appear in iPhone looks so different
I find they are completely different, is it iPhone screen or my MacBook. I just bought this MacBook not long ago so I'm not really sure. it's really frustrated when I spent hours to nail the colour editing, any suggestions please! 😄 😄
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Can you be more specific?
You have a photo. Got that. You view it on your MacBook. Which app do you use for comparison? Capture One, Apple Photo?
And you review the photo on your iPhone. Which app?
Can you describe the difference?0 -
Paul_Steunebrink wrote:
Can you be more specific?
You have a photo. Got that. You view it on your MacBook. Which app do you use for comparison? Capture One, Apple Photo?
And you review the photo on your iPhone. Which app?
Can you describe the difference?
Thank Paul for a response. I edited in Capture One and sent to my iPhone via airdrop, when I viewed it in my iPhone via camera roll, compared to the one in Capture one are so different. The one on iPhone appeared to be more orangy
I exported it using capture one recipes.0 -
Your computer screen and your iPhone screen are differently (if at all) calibrated. One might have a temperature of 6500K, the other might have 4000K. One might cover more color space than the other (e.g. 70% aRGB vs 90% aRGB). 0 -
What ICC profile did you set on the Output Recipe?
If the file is being displayed in a compressed form, compared to how you viewed it on your computer screen, the balance of the number of pixels making up a certain colour can change and some colours, especially in the yellow/orange/red area of the spectrum, can appear to stand out more - an effect that is additional to any colour profile equality matters.
HTH.
Grant0 -
NNN637115411386176187 wrote:
I find they are completely different, is it iPhone screen or my MacBook. I just bought this MacBook not long ago so I'm not really sure. it's really frustrated when I spent hours to nail the colour editing, any suggestions please! 😄 😄
Are you using True Tone on both?0 -
Wesley wrote:
NNN637115411386176187 wrote:
I find they are completely different, is it iPhone screen or my MacBook. I just bought this MacBook not long ago so I'm not really sure. it's really frustrated when I spent hours to nail the colour editing, any suggestions please! 😄 😄
Are you using True Tone on both?
Hi Wesley, thank you
Yes I have both on True Tone, should I disable them?0 -
SFA wrote:
What ICC profile did you set on the Output Recipe?
If the file is being displayed in a compressed form, compared to how you viewed it on your computer screen, the balance of the number of pixels making up a certain colour can change and some colours, especially in the yellow/orange/red area of the spectrum, can appear to stand out more - an effect that is additional to any colour profile equality matters.
HTH.
Grant
I used sRGB color space profile, what do you recommend to use?0 -
NNN637115411386176187 wrote:
Wesley wrote:
NNN637115411386176187 wrote:
I find they are completely different, is it iPhone screen or my MacBook. I just bought this MacBook not long ago so I'm not really sure. it's really frustrated when I spent hours to nail the colour editing, any suggestions please! 😄 😄
Are you using True Tone on both?
Hi Wesley, thank you
Yes I have both on True Tone, should I disable them?
Yes, it should be disabled on both when editing and comparing color. True Tone was my first assumption since you said it looked more orange in comparison.0
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