Hi Mates!
The problem:
if, with adobe gamma, i set the icc profile of my monitor to "adobe rgb1998"
and in photoshop color settings set "adobe rgb1998" i havn't problem.
If in adobe gamma i set the icc profile of my monitor to "sony_d93" (my
monitor) and in photoshop "adobe rgb1998" this happens:
- if i take a screen shot of the monitor in internet explorer with an
image and than i paste it (ctrl+v) in photoshop the colors of the image
changes, in photoshop the colors are different!
Can you explain me what i must do to have the correspondence with photoshop
and another image viewer like internet explorer or similar?
Thnks In Adnvace
ApWizard
The problem:
if, with adobe gamma, i set the icc profile of my monitor to "adobe rgb1998"
and in photoshop color settings set "adobe rgb1998" i havn't problem.
If in adobe gamma i set the icc profile of my monitor to "sony_d93" (my
monitor) and in photoshop "adobe rgb1998" this happens:
- if i take a screen shot of the monitor in internet explorer with an
image and than i paste it (ctrl+v) in photoshop the colors of the image
changes, in photoshop the colors are different!
Can you explain me what i must do to have the correspondence with photoshop
and another image viewer like internet explorer or similar?
Thnks In Adnvace
ApWizard
). What you can do is set your monitor with Adobe Gamma so as to get a "correct " (cough) lightness hue and saturation. But don't expect others to have done the same! What you made may be perfect on your well-calibrated monitor, but may well look horrible on someone else's, not speaking of the difference between mac and PC gamma...