So, If I set my PS working space to sRGB and save as sRGB jpg, won't I lose the ability to use the PS tools in the wider working spaces? Do I have to save 2 distinct sets of photos If I want the widest color gamut for "posterit," (saved to my desktop as photopro rgb tiff or adobe RGB jpg) but also want my uploaded photos to be vibrant (saved as in sRGB working space as sRGB jpg). Record photo in RAW and process in Lightroom, open in PS5 for any further work, and save usually in adobe RGB or photopro RGB-these color spaces have wider gamut/more color headroom than sRGB, isn't that correct (better for printing, no?) ? I think I understand comments above, but here is my workflow. I get this problem all the time where my internet-displayed photos have dull and muddied colors compared to how they look on my desktop, and have never understood how to properly manage the color profiles/workspaces. You just need to open up from ACR in sRGB into Photoshop, have your working space set to sRGB & then you save as an sRGB JPEG & the image will look fine on the net. Also it's not in TIFF format when opened up in photoshop, just uncompressed, as you chose the file format when saving. Also your Photoshop workspace would also need to be set to ProPhoto to enable you to work within that space, because if it wasn't you would get an 'Embedded Profile Mismatch' warning asking you if you would like to stay within the imported profile or convert to working profile. You can allocate 8bit Adobe RGB or sRGB if you like. It will only open up as a 16bit ProPhoto file if the settings are set to that in the workflow options in ACR. If you simply use the File/Save As/JPEG command the ProPhoto color space info is embedded in the 8-bit JPG file and the colors won't look correct. When you send an image from Adobe Camera Raw to Photoshop CS it opens as a 16-bit ProPhoto color space TIFF. Maybe one day I'll get to pursue it more, but if anyone has any general tips or advice, I'd really appreciate it (: I just list a few things out of my closest for charity time to time. I don't really have the time to read or take a photography class. Should I re-convert those to JPG using SRGB? The brown fur jacket and brown shirt look OK (used Convert profile to sRGB), but the White safari jacket and plaid shirt (didn't use sRGB) looks washed out as far as icons go. I've been using the following method to convert in photoshop CS6:įile > Scripts > Image Processor > either 1000 or 1100 pixel and quality 12 (highest from what I know) But for some reason when I convert to JPG it kills it =/
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