I am preparing an online catalogue of C19th prints, providing direct comparison between digital images of the different impressions of the prints (iiif up to 3200 dpi of the original, "true" colour). Depending on the size of and access to the prints, the images are captured with a scanner (Epson 10000XL/Silverfast, 16 colour bit depth) or a camera (OM EM5ii + 30 mm or 60 mm macro/OMWorkspace, ca 12 colour bit depth). Images of the same object created by these 3 different systems render colours very differently when compared side by side on a monitor. And anything I do in Photoshop etc does not make it better. The images are not to be intended to be printed. The underlying database of captured images and metadata is intended to form the basis of an archive as "true" as possible given currently available technology.
A number of questions arise
1. It is suggested that the rendering intent may be one cause of mismatched colours when converting from RAW to files that can be rendered on a monitor. Would Absolute or Relative Colorimetric Intent be better to achieve these aims? This Cambridge COLOR SPACE CONVERSION paper suggests the Absolute method has little usefulness.
2. What is the best way to calibrate these systems so that a colour on the same object creates the same colour value in the image files and thence on a monitor? The absolute value rendered on a specific monitor (a user's standard of colour rendering is not controllable) is of less importance than inter-image consistency.
Thank you