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Paper icc Profiles

Kommentare

7 Kommentare

  • Tibor
    Save to: your hard drive / Library / ColorSync / Profiles
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  • Warren Jordan
    That worked, thanks!! So by installing the icc and clicking on that profile under the export, that is the same as soft proofing, correct?
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  • Tibor
    correct. no gamut warning though.
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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="Tibor" wrote:
    correct. no gamut warning though.


    If you use the "proofing" through the "glasses", I think that, indeed, there is no gamut warning. But I have a gamut warning when selecting the process recipe as proof profile.
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  • Warren Jordan
    [quote="tenmangu81" wrote:
    [quote="Tibor" wrote:
    correct. no gamut warning though.


    If you use the "proofing" through the "glasses", I think that, indeed, there is no gamut warning. But I have a gamut warning when selecting the process recipe as proof profile.


    How do you get the gamut warning when selecting the process recipe, think I'm missing something?
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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="NN116688UL1" wrote:

    How do you get the gamut warning when selecting the process recipe, think I'm missing something?


    The warning (triangle) is related with the values selected in the preferences ("exposure warning"). When a colour is out of gamut in a specific space, its value becomes virtually "out of the 255 value". You can try it by choosing a picture with very saturated colours (close to 255) in a wide colour space (such as Prophoto for instance), and restrict the colour space in the process recipe to a narrower one, such as sRGB for instance. You'll see what colours are out of gamut by clicking on the warning triangle.
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  • Warren Jordan
    [quote="tenmangu81" wrote:
    [quote="NN116688UL1" wrote:

    How do you get the gamut warning when selecting the process recipe, think I'm missing something?


    The warning (triangle) is related with the values selected in the preferences ("exposure warning"). When a colour is out of gamut in a specific space, its value becomes virtually "out of the 255 value". You can try it by choosing a picture with very saturated colours (close to 255) in a wide colour space (such as Prophoto for instance), and restrict the colour space in the process recipe to a narrower one, such as sRGB for instance. You'll see what colours are out of gamut by clicking on the warning triangle.



    Got it, that makes sense! Thanks for that explanation!
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