Exported images does not show the adjustments
Hi all, im new to all this. So please pardon me if this is a silly question.
I have made some adjustments to the picture (jpeg) and export the processed variant (as a jpeg)
When I viewed in windows photo viewer, I can see the changes I made.
But when I opened it in Paint3D / Paint, it shows the original picture without the adjustments. Why is this so?
I tried playing with the ICC profile. So I selected Adobe instead of sRGB, then export. It now allows me to see the changes in Paint3D/Paint. Can anyone explain why? Is selecting the "adobe icc profile" the only way for me to edit in other program?
I have made some adjustments to the picture (jpeg) and export the processed variant (as a jpeg)
When I viewed in windows photo viewer, I can see the changes I made.
But when I opened it in Paint3D / Paint, it shows the original picture without the adjustments. Why is this so?
I tried playing with the ICC profile. So I selected Adobe instead of sRGB, then export. It now allows me to see the changes in Paint3D/Paint. Can anyone explain why? Is selecting the "adobe icc profile" the only way for me to edit in other program?
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[quote="NNN636931571249007819" wrote:
Hi all, im new to all this. So please pardon me if this is a silly question.
I have made some adjustments to the picture (jpeg) and export the processed variant (as a jpeg)
When I viewed in windows photo viewer, I can see the changes I made.
But when I opened it in Paint3D / Paint, it shows the original picture without the adjustments. Why is this so?
I tried playing with the ICC profile. So I selected Adobe instead of sRGB, then export. It now allows me to see the changes in Paint3D/Paint. Can anyone explain why? Is selecting the "adobe icc profile" the only way for me to edit in other program?
Sounds like a colour management issue. Some windows apps are colour managed and most are not. Windows photo viewer in Win 7 I believe was colour managed but the default viewer in Win 10 isn't. No idea about Paint but my guess is not.
Open the exported image in a program with known colour management (takes the monitor profile into account) and see what you get. C1Pro is colour managed, as is PS, Affinity Photo, Faststone viewer V7 (colour management is not on by default but must be set in preferences).
Is your monitor a wide gamut type? Sounds like it is and you need to use colour managed apps to correctly view files.
Ian0 -
Are you sure you opened the edited version of the jpg in paint and not the original?
Is there a particular benefit that you seek from editing a jpg in Capture One and then further editing it in Paint?0 -
Yap. pretty sure I opened the processed image.
From my thumbnail in the folder, I can see that the processed picture image (e.g. lighter yellow) but when I opened in paint3D its back to the original yellow (bright orangy yellow). So I don't think its my monitor. So likely its the app. but the moment I try exporting in "adobe" instead of "sRGB", the paint3D reflect the right processed colour.
I used paint3D to try to resize. As mentioned, Im new to C1. so just playing with different function, opening with other apps.0 -
[quote="NNN636931571249007819" wrote:
our.
I used paint3D to try to resize. As mentioned, Im new to C1. so just playing with different function, opening with other apps.
There's no reason to use another app for resizing.
In C1, under the "Help", one may select the online user guide (also available with the F1 key).
Cropping is explained under "Editing Images > Composition > Cropping".
One may choose the file size and file type under the "Output" tab (gear icon, in C1 Pro).0
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