Last edited by pschlute; 8th April 2022 at 06:51 PM.
Perhaps. I do find it curious that your monitor shows different reds between the Adobe file and the Prophoto file, if your monitor is 100% Adobe RGB (1998).
I know what he posted; I have them on my hard drive. Each image has three areas, each area with one channel set to 255 and the other two channels set to 0 - and each file has a different embedded profile.He is posting three different colours in three different colour spaces, in three different images in the reds; greens; and blues ...
Still thinking that the driver is doing the clipping on my machine.... only one of which your monitor is capable of displaying [correctly] ..... the [one] in sRGB.
Last edited by xpatUSA; 8th April 2022 at 10:02 PM.
Ted,
The three files that I posted in post # 53 all look the same on your monitor because the gamut of your monitor is too small to display the Adobe RGB and the Prophoto RGB. Either the colour management on your browser is working and showing you the closest colour that your monitor can do OR it is not working and you are seeing the primaries of your monitor's gamut in all three cases because the numbers are the same in the three files.
The three file have the same data because they were created that way. The profiles is where the translation between image data and real world colour occurs. The data is the same but the individual profiles interprets them differently. Take a close look at the description of how colour management works that I posted #53.
Now that I have installed a new browser, I can confirm that all three files look different on my wide gamut monitor but they look the same on my sRGB laptop; which is as it should be.
HTH
Last edited by Round Tuit; 8th April 2022 at 09:03 PM.
Exactly what I found also comparing my wide-gamut and sRGB monitors.Now that I have installed a new browser, I can confirm that all three files look different on my wide gamut monitor but they look the same on my sRGB laptop; which is as it should be.
Yes, I was already aware of color management theory.
Of course, I agree that red will look the same red on an sRGB monitor for each of your files.
Assuming for the sake of discussion that your wide-gamut monitor is 100% Adobe RGB (1998) , what I still don't understand is why Adobe vs. ProtoPhoto files should and apparently do look different in the reds.
Now that I have installed a new browser, I can confirm that all three files look different on my wide gamut monitor but they look the same on my sRGB laptop; which is as it should be. HTH