Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
You have good colour vision. We seem to be in the same age group, so it is good to confirm that you can distinguish the hues quite well.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
It's not about what you like or not, or are able to or not. It's about the software, do they show the colors as should be.
It's much more than the software. It's a combination of the abilities of the hardware, having the hardware that is properly set up and the working environment. It is definitely not just the software.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
Back to the thread. This thread convinces me that using a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut screen doesn't enlarge accuracy.
And I did learn something.
George
Tt depends on what is in the image. If you photograph brightly coloured flowers or tropical birds with brilliant colours or shoot night scenes with bright, intense lights, then Adobe RGB will display colours "more accurately" than an sRGB screen. The wider colour spaces handle the brighter and more intense colours. AdobeRGB can handle about 50% more colours than sRGB can. If those colours are in the scene and they are in gamut for the wider gamut hardware, then an AdobeRGB compliant screen will render the colours more accurately.
That being said, those colours have to be in the image for this to be important, so if you are shooting subdued colours, chances are that the entire image might not be as wide as even the sRGB colour space, then there is no advantage to a wider gamut screen in that particular situation. Both an sRGB and AdobeRGB screen will replicate the colours accurately.
People would not spend the extra money on an AdobeRGB compliant screen if it did not make a meaningful difference in how well the colours are reproduced. I use a dual screen setup with my primary screen being AdobeRGB compliant and my secondary screen being an sRGB one. There is a perceivable difference in how the colours look when I have a scene with colours that are OOG for sRGB.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Manfred M
You have good colour vision. We seem to be in the same age group, so it is good to confirm that you can distinguish the hues quite well.
It's much more than the software. It's a combination of the abilities of the hardware, having the hardware that is properly set up and the working environment. It is definitely not just the software.
Tt depends on what is in the image. If you photograph brightly coloured flowers or tropical birds with brilliant colours or shoot night scenes with bright, intense lights, then Adobe RGB will display colours "more accurately" than an sRGB screen. The wider colour spaces handle the brighter and more intense colours. AdobeRGB can handle about 50% more colours than sRGB can. If those colours are in the scene and they are in gamut for the wider gamut hardware, then an AdobeRGB compliant screen will render the colours more accurately.
That being said, those colours have to be in the image for this to be important, so if you are shooting subdued colours, chances are that the entire image might not be as wide as even the sRGB colour space, then there is no advantage to a wider gamut screen in that particular situation. Both an sRGB and AdobeRGB screen will replicate the colours accurately.
People would not spend the extra money on an AdobeRGB compliant screen if it did not make a meaningful difference in how well the colours are reproduced. I use a dual screen setup with my primary screen being AdobeRGB compliant and my secondary screen being an sRGB one. There is a perceivable difference in how the colours look.
I do agree that a wide gamut screen will show colors nicer as a smaller gamut screen. But that's not the thread. Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
George
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
Back to the thread. This thread convinces me that using a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut screen doesn't [enhance] accuracy.
How is color "accuracy" measured, George?
Wouldn't it be nice if the bone of contention could be quantified and the differences in accuracy measured, like in terms of CIE delta-E?
It's much more difficult to argue against numbers which have no respect for how something "looks".
Might do it. It's cold and dark outside and I've got small MacBeth card up on the wall. As we all know, one of the MacBeth patches is slightly out of sRGB gamut so that would be the one, eh?
Take the shot. Open and edit it in ProPhoto working space and save as sRGB. Open again but in sRGB working space, do exactly the same edits and save again as sRGB. Will there be significant differences or not?
Taking bets but no guilders, please. :)
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
George
Have a look at this video https://vimeo.com/206377678 George. It is one put out by Affinity and gives a couple of examples (note the second one in particular) of how you can get more out of an image editing in ProPhoto RGB even when the final product and the view on screen is sRGB. It is fairly extreme editing though and it doesn't show what could be achieved by bumping up the adjustments further in sRGB mode.
Dave
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
xpatUSA
It's much more difficult to argue against numbers which have no respect for how something "looks".
Might do it. It's cold and dark outside and I've got small MacBeth card up on the wall. As we all know, one of the MacBeth patches is slightly out of sRGB gamut so that would be the one, eh?
Take the shot. Open and edit it in ProPhoto working space and save as sRGB. Open again but in sRGB working space, do exactly the same edits and save again as sRGB. Will there be significant differences or not?
Taking bets but no guilders, please. :)
Even better, I found a card shot from previous color accuracy testing. Here are two developments, one with ProPhoto working space, the other with sRGB. Recall that I mentioned that one patch is out of gamut in sRGB.
Here's the sRGB working space version:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/co...WB-117no22.jpg
Here's the ProPhoto working space version:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/co...WB-118no22.jpg
Not a lot of difference on my monitor. :D
Still, here are the numbers in CIELAB space for the MacBeth cyan patch #18:
ProPhoto WS: a* = -27.3 and b* = -27.0
sRGB WS: a* = -23.4 and b* = -26.9
In HSV space, the one is 190 degs of hue, the other is 192 degs of hue, a mere 2 degs different.
The obvious conclusion is that, with my stuff, problems only arise if the editor or the display driver has no color management.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
I do agree that a wide gamut screen will show colors nicer as a smaller gamut screen. But that's not the thread. Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
George
The question is missing a crucial piece of information - What is the final use of the image. Is it to be printed or just viewed on a screen? If just to be viewed on a screen is it Adobe RGB capable or just a sRGB screen standard for most internet viewers? If printed what gamut is available?
Just because at an editing step it may not be possible to display the colours accurately does not mean they should be discarded at that stage.
Just over twenty years ago I sat beside a top graphics designer while we worked on the design of a book cover. (A book about the Dutch merchant navy during the second world war) He used the screen as just a tool for the layout that also gave some indication of colour. Whenever I queried a specific colour he would grab a colour chart and show me the colour it would be once printed. His proofing printer was his colour reference, not the display screen. In the end, due to costs, we opted for a duotone cover and I was surprised at how much the monitor's representation varied from the printed version. However, the designer seemed to have no trouble in visualising the final outcome from the image on the screen.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Take the shot. Open and edit it in ProPhoto working space and save as sRGB. Open again but in sRGB working space, do exactly the same edits and save again as sRGB. Will there be significant differences or not?
Nope, not always. But I suspect you knew that and that the question was rhetorical.
Quote:
Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
George, watch the video that Dave posted. It proves the point: it does matter.
QED
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Yes, I scored 0.:) My hearing isn't what it used to be but it seems my colour discrimination still works.:)
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
I do agree that a wide gamut screen will show colors nicer as a smaller gamut screen. But that's not the thread. Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
George
See post #1 in this thread. If you don't believe what I have written, check out Dave's link in #44.
Using more data is almost always the best way to proceed with any approach and throwing data away should be done as late as possible in the process.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Manfred M
See post #1 in this thread. If you don't believe what I have written, check out Dave's link in #44.
Using more data is almost always the best way to proceed with any approach and throwing data away should be done as late as possible in the process.
I read post 1. You explained something about colors and how these are rendered to fit on the screen, and about the OOG colors. But half way we noticed that for imaging the perceptual rendering intent was used. All the image is placed in the narrow gamut. No OOG by definition. The soft proof is showing what happens if you want to use another gamut and with which preferences. Nowhere I did get the explanation of the "why".
I did look at the video linked to by Dave. I only have CapturNx2 and sometime I play with Gimp. It's impressive what it shows. It looks as the pixel values are changed when another profile is selected. The picture itself doesn't change but the histogram does.
Correct me if I'm wrong. He's doing some editing in a ProPhotoProfiel. Once he's ready he shows what would have happened when the same editing would have been done in a sRGB profile,
George
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
Correct me if I'm wrong. He's doing some editing in a ProPhotoProfiel. Once he's ready he shows what would have happened when the same editing would have been done in a sRGB profile,
George
Yes that’s correct. The base image is in ProPhoto when the adjustment layers are set up amd then the base image is convereted to sRGB. This means that the adjustments contained in the layers are re-calculated on the sRGB image.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
I read post 1. You explained something about colors and how these are rendered to fit on the screen, and about the OOG colors. But half way we noticed that for imaging the perceptual rendering intent was used. All the image is placed in the narrow gamut. No OOG by definition. The soft proof is showing what happens if you want to use another gamut and with which preferences. Nowhere I did get the explanation of the "why".
Why - because your get a more accurate handling of out of gamut colours. This is true regardless of which rendering intent is used as the new edited values always use the data from the wide colour space. The rendering intent only impacts the colours that are displayed on the screen; it has no impact on the data the is being manipulated by the computer.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
I did look at the video linked to by Dave. I only have CapturNx2 and sometime I play with Gimp. It's impressive what it shows. It looks as the pixel values are changed when another profile is selected. The picture itself doesn't change but the histogram does.
If the histogram changes, so does the colour information in the image. You might not be able to see those changes visually as they will be subtle, but the histogram, which analyses the underlying data will pick up those differences.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
Correct me if I'm wrong. He's doing some editing in a ProPhotoProfiel. Once he's ready he shows what would have happened when the same editing would have been done in a sRGB profile,
Correct. He is trying to explain / demonstrate why editing in a wider colour space is preferable to doing so in a narrow colour space when viewing the output on a narrow (sRGB) computer screen. The same as I was trying to do in #1.
He reaches the same conclusion I did - more subtle and more accurate colours are produced by using that workflow.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Manfred M
Why - because your get a more accurate handling of out of gamut colours.
I asked someone else here about 'accuracy' as regards color, but no response received yet.
Is the accuracy of 'handling of out of gamut colours' quantifiable in any way, or are we doomed to discuss it in general terms only?
Quote:
This is true regardless of which rendering intent is used as the new edited values always use the data from the wide colour space. The rendering intent only impacts the colours that are displayed on the screen; it has no impact on the data that is being manipulated by the computer.
I discovered this effect long ago with Elements 6. PSE's color picker numbers did not always agree with my screen color picker numbers, depending on how PSE6's crude color management was set up from the 'Edit' menu.
The effect still exists in my current raw converter. It's color-picker numbers vary depending which working color space is selected but the review image appearance does not change.
Some of us have perhaps noticed this oddity. Most of us perhaps have not.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
xpatUSA
The effect still exists in my current raw converter. It's color-picker numbers vary depending which working color space is selected but the review image appearance does not change.
I thought I would illustrate the above effect with an old and troublesome sunflower image:
Working space sRGB:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/su...-wngs%20on.jpg
In this review image the exposure warnings are on, 1 for low and 254 for high. The blue areas are 1 or 0, mostly 0 meaning (to me) out-of-sRGB-gamut because they are 100% saturated.
Opened in ProPhoto working space:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/su...-wngs%20on.jpg
In this review image, the warnings are still on but observe the color-picker numbers - no over-saturation there.
I could even crank up the saturation a bit to make the flower look even prettier without setting off any warnings. A few of us, including George I think, would say "you shouldn't do that!". And they would be right - I'm not even going to bother to do it. The result, when 'converted for the web' will be horrible, complete with faux colors everywhere.
And so, for viewing on my sRGB monitor and for posting on the web, I will continue to edit with my converter set to sRGB working space.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
xpatUSA
I thought I would illustrate the above effect with an old and troublesome sunflower image:
Working space sRGB:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/su...-wngs%20on.jpg
In this review image the exposure warnings are on, 1 for low and 254 for high. The blue areas are 1 or 0, mostly 0 meaning (to me) out-of-sRGB-gamut because they are 100% saturated.
Opened in ProPhoto working space:
http://kronometric.org/phot/gamut/su...-wngs%20on.jpg
In this review image, the warnings are still on but observe the color-picker numbers - no over-saturation there.
I could even crank up the saturation a bit to make the flower look even prettier without setting off any warnings. A few of us, including George I think, would say "you shouldn't do that!". And they would be right - I'm not even going to bother to do it. The result, when 'converted for the web' will be
horrible, complete with faux colors everywhere.
And so, for viewing on my sRGB monitor and for posting on the web, I will continue to edit with my converter set to sRGB working space.
It looks a quite impressive example but is it? Is this Rawtherapee? I'm just trying to figure out what's happening.
You start with a picture in sRGB that contains some clipping based on the histogram. The pixels have a value based on that color space.
Than you change to Prophoto. The pixels are getting another value. To maintain the same image on your screen the value is mostly lower in that wider color space. You can see the histogram moving to the left. But the warnings are still 1 and 254. So no clipping.
Would be better to start with a nearly/partly clipping image in Prophoto and then change to sRGB.
George
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Manfred, I have read that editing an sRGB image in AdobeRGB is preferred over ProPhoto. Something about the size differences. Is there any reason why this may be true?
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Abitconfused
Manfred, I have read that editing an sRGB image in AdobeRGB is preferred over ProPhoto. Something about the size differences. Is there any reason why this may be true?
It is not a recommendation I agree with. Although AdobeRGB is larger than sRGB I understand it doesn't completely include the sRGB colour space whereas ProPhoto does. I would not consider size as being of much significance.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Abitconfused
Manfred, I have read that editing an sRGB image in AdobeRGB is preferred over ProPhoto. Something about the size differences. Is there any reason why this may be true?
The statement is incorrect, so far as I know. The only time that I understand that ProPhoto should not be used is when the final product output will be CMYK. That is unlikely to affect any of the members here as we don’t create output for press work.
Even here I am not sure that this information is up to date. The problem with any RGB to CMYK colour space conversion is that one can make up a colour purely from a direct mapping of RGB to CMY values. The K; which is the black ink makes the colours more or less "rich", so doing a conversion means real world testing is required to determine the right amount of K on a CMY overlay. This is further complicated by the fact that the cyan inks are not as "efficient" as the cyan or magenta ones and about 30% more is required to get correct colour.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
george013
It looks a quite impressive example but is it?
Yes.
Quote:
Is this Rawtherapee?
No.
Quote:
I'm just trying to figure out what's happening.
You start with a picture in sRGB that contains some clipping based on the histogram. The pixels have a value based on that color space.
Than you change to Prophoto. The pixels are getting another value. To maintain the same image on your screen the value is mostly lower in that wider color space. You can see the histogram moving to the left. But the warnings are still 1 and 254. So no clipping.
I don't really need to be told what I did and what the results were, George. So, no comment
Quote:
Would be better to start with a nearly/partly clipping image in Prophoto and then change to sRGB.
George
That statement shows us that, sadly, you didn't get it. :(
However, please do try that and post your results. Would you like the raw file?
Er, what is a "nearly/partly clipping image"?
In my world, images are either clipped or they are not. There is no "partly" , sorry.
Re: Why one should use a wide colour space when editing images on a narrow gamut scre
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Abitconfused
Manfred, I have read that editing an sRGB image in AdobeRGB is preferred over ProPhoto. Something about the size differences. Is there any reason why this may be true?
Ed,
I think that there is a theoritical possibility to introduce banding when a larger gamut is used because of the size of the discrete steps in digitizing the colour space. If you are editing in 8 bit mode, for example, then each channel has only 256 levels and therefore a wider gamut would result in larger difference in "shade" between each level than a smaller gamut. However, I have never seen this effect using 16 bit mode nor have I tried editing in 8 bit mode to see if it happens there.
André