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Anyone else having issues with soft Proofing

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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="NNN636873132526897640" wrote:

    Example of one issue. My monitors have the correct icc profiles assigned in color management. I have a reciepe for JPEG SRGB, nothing happens to the color in capture one. But when I export the jpeg and view it in IrFranview or FastRawViewer , both using the sRGB icc profile, the colors in the JPEG are saturated.


    I don't know about FastRawViewer since I've never used it.
    First, have you installed the plugin to enable color management in Irfanview? Also, you have to set it to use "current monitor profile" and not sRGB icc profile. The image needs to tell to Irfanview its own color space while the output profile needs to be the one that describes your viewing device, i.e. your monitor. If you tell Irfanview to use sRGB you are telling it that your monitor gamut is sRGB, but your monitor is wide gamut, so it will show oversaturated colors. The same will happen if you haven't installed the plugin.
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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="terrylw64" wrote:
    I haven't tried to use soft proofing until recently. As my monitors were sRGB and I was mainly exporting out to JPEGS for the web. Now that I've replaced my monitors and calibrated them to Adobe RGB, I wish to use soft proofing.

    Example of one issue. My monitors have the correct icc profiles assigned in color management. I have a reciepe for JPEG SRGB, nothing happens to the color in capture one. But when I export the jpeg and view it in IrFranview or FastRawViewer , both using the sRGB icc profile, the colors in the JPEG are saturated.

    Further more, you don't necessarily have to put a checkbox on a receipe, just merely highlighting it will apply. Although I saw no change in color in my JPEG sRGB receipe, the output sharpening was applied.

    I'm just seeing a lot of inconsistencies.


    I have the same issue. Both of my monitors have been calibrated to Adobe RGB. When I use soft proofing for printing using a Canon ICC profile, I see the reduction in contrast that I expect. However, when I use the sRGB ICC profile, nothing happens. That doesn't seem to be the correct behavior.
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  • SFA
    [quote="NNN636178173677592474" wrote:
    [quote="terrylw64" wrote:
    I haven't tried to use soft proofing until recently. As my monitors were sRGB and I was mainly exporting out to JPEGS for the web. Now that I've replaced my monitors and calibrated them to Adobe RGB, I wish to use soft proofing.

    Example of one issue. My monitors have the correct icc profiles assigned in color management. I have a reciepe for JPEG SRGB, nothing happens to the color in capture one. But when I export the jpeg and view it in IrFranview or FastRawViewer , both using the sRGB icc profile, the colors in the JPEG are saturated.

    Further more, you don't necessarily have to put a checkbox on a receipe, just merely highlighting it will apply. Although I saw no change in color in my JPEG sRGB receipe, the output sharpening was applied.

    I'm just seeing a lot of inconsistencies.


    I have the same issue. Both of my monitors have been calibrated to Adobe RGB. When I use soft proofing for printing using a Canon ICC profile, I see the reduction in contrast that I expect. However, when I use the sRGB ICC profile, nothing happens. That doesn't seem to be the correct behavior.


    What would you expect to happen?

    ETA: to add a quick and understandable link.

    https://fstoppers.com/pictures/adobergb-vs-srgb-3167
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