Originally Posted by
Graystar
You may need to work in the Adobe RGB color space, which would also dictate having a monitor that can display colors in the Adobe RGB color space. This may not help you, though, because it means that anyone else viewing the image must have color management properly configured, and must also have a monitor that can display Adobe RGB colors in order to see the intense greens.
I have a monitor that can display Adobe RGB greens and there is a good bit of difference between the most intense sRGB green and the most intense Adobe RGB green. I also performed an experiment on capturing those greens with the camera set to sRGB vs Adobe RGB.
On my monitor I displayed a large rectangle set to the most intense Adobe RGB green, and a second rectangle set to the most intense sRGB green. Using my Nikon D90, I then captured my monitor in an sRGB JPEG and an Adobe RGB JPEG. The result was that in the sRGB JPEG the two green boxes looked the same and had the same RGB values...on the Adobe RGB JPEG, however, the two boxes were different. This proved to me that the monitor was, in fact, displaying greens that were beyond the sRGB color space (and also that my camera can capture such greens.)
So I would say that if you want to see more intense greens, you need a system that can actually show more intense greens. That means using Adobe RGB along with a high-end monitor. But as I said...most people won't be able to see, on their monitors, what you will be able to see with such a system.