Hi,
Was using my DSLR, which format is gd? which 1 give a nicer picture?
Any diff?
adobeRGB has a wider gamut
Was using my DSLR, which format is gd? which 1 give a nicer picture?
Erm.. please do not do cross-posting .. and please read the existing threads to honour the time and efforts dedicated by fellow photographers here.
sRGB if you want to post the pictures online. I use Adobe RGB only for printing.
er... that should depend on whether the viewing software is colour aware (as well as possibly the rendering intent in the colour space conversion process)...I have taken ONE picture in AdobeRGB, put it into photoshop, then saved it in both color spaces and with/without ICC profile embedded.
Conclusion: Images saved in Adobe RGB (1998) with and without embedded ICC profile, appear washed out.
er... that should depend on whether the viewing software is colour aware (as well as possibly the rendering intent in the colour space conversion process)...
just checked the original files in the "more sample here" link, found that, using Adobe Bridge and opening in Photoshop CS3,
1) only the "ARGB w ICC" image has an embedded colour space
2) other than the images "ARGB w ICC" and "ARGB wO ICC", the other images were all brighter and more saturated, whether in Bridge or opened in Photoshop... could be a rendering intent issue in the conversion?... how was the conversion from Adobe RGB to sRGB carried out?
I have taken ONE picture in AdobeRGB, put it into photoshop, then saved it in both color spaces and with/without ICC profile embedded.
Conclusion: Images saved in Adobe RGB (1998) with and without embedded ICC profile, appear washed out.
For most output devices (printers, web), sRGB should reproduce WYSIWYG. Only special printing services provide devices that can interpret and print according to AdobeRGB and ICC profiles. Hence, imo, it is safest to shoot and work in sRGB. Unless you want to take a step further by shooting in AdobeRGB work in AdobeRGB then save as sRGB by converting the color space or using the 'save for web'.