Originally Posted by
DanK
Manfred,
This is both hijacking the thread and going beyond what I know, but...
Adobe is fairly closed-mouthed about the internal workings of its raw processor, but here is what I have gleaned from various sources, Adobe when possible. Let me know if you think any of this is incorrect.
1. Adobe has a single raw processing engine, onto which they put two front ends, LR and ACR.
2. The internal working space of this raw processing engine is called Linear ProPhoto RGB, which is basically ProPhoto but with a linear tonal response curve.
3. For purposes of viewing and creating a histogram, this is converted to a proprietary version of ProPhoto called "Melissa".
If this is all correct, the fork in the road comes at the point of moving the image into Photoshop. ACR allows you to convert from Linear ProPhoto to Lab in the process of creating the Photoshop base layer. Lightroom does not: it will create the base layer in whatever the Photoshop working space is, presumably ProPhoto, and requires that you convert this to Lab as a subsequent step.
If all this is correct, can it really make an appreciable difference?
BTW, totally off topic, it seems to me that people have two main reasons for converting from ProPhoto to Lab in Photoshop. One is to separate tonality adjustments from color adjustments. The second is the flip side: to be able to manipulate color separately from tonality, using the a and b axes rather than RGB. I don't do the second, for the most part. I find it awkward to work on the a and b axes, and if one simply wants to remove tonality from color adjustments, one can use a color blend in RGB space. I do the former a lot because I often don't want tonality adjustments to affect saturation. However, I find it easier to do this with a luminosity blend in RGB space. That avoids two problems: the loss of information that occurs when switching from RGB to Lab or vice versa (losing the layers within the old color space), and filters or plugins that don't work in Lab.
But this last is just a matter of preference. I'm not suggesting it's better, just explaining why I find it easier.
Dan