Hey guys; I recently upgraded from CS4 to CS5 and just noticed that when I am saving my flattened, edited images as jpegs, there is a little box checked beside this (embed Color Profile, etc)? My camera setting are set to sRGB. thanks!
Oct 09, 2011 16:26 | #1 Hey guys; I recently upgraded from CS4 to CS5 and just noticed that when I am saving my flattened, edited images as jpegs, there is a little box checked beside this (embed Color Profile, etc)? My camera setting are set to sRGB. thanks! Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | Oct 09, 2011 16:42 | #2 Did you have a question in there somewhere? Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Oct 09, 2011 16:49 | #3 tim wrote in post #13226065 Did you have a question in there somewhere? Images should always have the color profile embedded. Obviously I am confused, I thought the sRGB was the color profile; these are two different things? Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 09, 2011 16:50 | #4 Are you saying that Photoshop is set to Adobe RGB? If you are, then you will want to convert to sRGB if you are preparing an image for the Web or most outside print servers. Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
I think my CS5 is set to sGRB, here is a screen shot: Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | Oct 09, 2011 17:05 | #6 Your color space is Photoshop is set to sRgb. Turn on those warning checkboxes in the color profile. Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 09, 2011 17:07 | #7 Michelle, are you shooting jpegs or Raw? If Raw, what are you using to convert? Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Oct 09, 2011 17:14 | #8 I shoot RAW. What do you mean about whatI use to convert? To jpeg? Or to bring into CS5? Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Oct 09, 2011 17:15 | #9 tim wrote in post #13226156 Your color space is Photoshop is set to sRgb. Turn on those warning checkboxes in the color profile. I think the issue here is you don't seem to understand anything about color management. You should read this book For now, set everything to sRgb, never use another color space, and embed profiles anywhere it lets you. Wasn't ignoring this, Tim, just saw the other post first. Thanks for the link, I WILL read it. Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 09, 2011 17:32 | #10 Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #13226194 I shoot RAW. What do you mean about whatI use to convert? To jpeg? Or to bring into CS5? What Raw converter are you using to bring the image into Photoshop? The fact that Photoshop shows the "embed Adobe RGB" message makes me suspect that your Raw converter is set to convert the image into aRGB. Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Oct 09, 2011 19:57 | #11 I am using ACR. And when I opened an image in it & looked at the bottom, it did show the Adobe 1998 color setting at the bottom. So I clicked on that & changed it to sGRB. I'm going to look at these other things too & make sure I have the right things selected. tonylong wrote in post #13226258 What Raw converter are you using to bring the image into Photoshop? The fact that Photoshop shows the "embed Adobe RGB" message makes me suspect that your Raw converter is set to convert the image into aRGB. Realize that your in-camera color space setting will not matter with your Raw converter. So, if you are using Camera Raw, open a Raw file in it and look at the link below the image preview. It will show what color space is being used and that is also the color space it will set when opening the file in Photoshop. Now, in the color settings dialog you showed us, Tim pointed out something important -- even though Photoshop is set to the sRGB color space, no "Warning" settings are checked. What this means is that if your Raw converter is set to hand off an aRGB file, Photoshop will go along with this without alerting you. So, a way of being "double-safe" is to set at least a warning to happen or, if you want, to set Photoshop to automatically convert an image to sRGB, or both -- it's up to you. Some folks don't want to automatically convert but do want the warning. I recall you are setting up your new Mac, right? Are you using Aperture for your Raw converter, or Camera Raw, or Lightroom...? Aperture and Lightroom will have a different approach to the color space thing. Michelle Brooks Photography
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | Oct 09, 2011 20:13 | #12 sRgb 8 bit at the camera native resolution. Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 09, 2011 20:27 | #13 Michelle Brooks Photography wrote in post #13226782 I am using ACR. And when I opened an image in it & looked at the bottom, it did show the Adobe 1998 color setting at the bottom. So I clicked on that & changed it to sGRB. I'm going to look at these other things too & make sure I have the right things selected. This led to another question for me; when I changed the color setting to sGRB it also had a choice of 8 or 16 bit channel. This is probably answered in the info Tim gave me to read, but for a fast answer, how is the best choice determined on that? Thanks for your help. I feel like I'll never learn all this. :roll eyes: Michelle, glad to see we're making progress Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tim Light Bringer 51,010 posts Likes: 375 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Wellington, New Zealand More info | Oct 09, 2011 20:35 | #14 That's not really a fast answer Tony Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
tonylong ...winded More info | Oct 09, 2011 20:56 | #15 Heh! I'm not very good on giving "fast" answers for some things, am I Tony
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member is Marcsaa 811 guests, 117 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||