Fixable how? If it was fixable, wouldn't you have fixed it?
Trust me: https://www.damiensymonds.net/bridge-30-day-challenge
Fixable how? If it was fixable, wouldn't you have fixed it?
Trust me: https://www.damiensymonds.net/bridge-30-day-challenge
Damien
My site
ONLY the programs that are capable of reading the monitor profile. As I said, very few are.
This is a common misunderstanding, I assure you. You see, that which we glibly call "monitor calibration" is actually two different, though consecutive, processes - calibration followed by profiling.
Calibration is the hardware part - shifting the way the monitor displays colours. Of course this is the most visible one, and yes, it affects all programs.
Then profiling is the part where the calibration device reads and records a "description" of the monitor's characteristics. This profile is saved in your system, where programs (which are capable of doing so) look for it and use it. Of course the Adobe programs are capable of this, but a lot of others aren't.
More info here: https://www.damiensymonds.net/2010/0...libration.html
I'd need to know more about this. Exactly what the difference looked like. I'm happy to pursue it with you if you like, but since you're now using CC 2017, it seems that that's what we need to concentrate on.
NO. Ameerat's settings are CATASTROPHIC. I can't stress this enough. You've turned off Photoshop's colour management, and now nothing you see in Photoshop is correct. Your PS Color Settings must remain on "North America General Purpose 2" at ALL TIMES.
How your granny, or anyone else, views your digital images is completely irrelevant. The only thing that matters is that YOU are maintaining perfection.
https://www.damiensymonds.net/2013/1...standards.html
And by "perfection" we mean that your calibrated screen (in a colour-managed program) displays images exactly the same as your pro lab prints them. Were you following my calibration instructions here? https://www.damiensymonds.net/calibration.html
The Dells have an excellent reputation. The Samsungs are dreadful, make sure that is only your second screen, where you have your panels and folders and stuff. Don't trust it for colour.
Not true at all. Windows can run multiple monitor profiles. If you have this limitation, it would be because of your calibrator. You mentioned below that you have a Spyder4, but didn't mention which one - Express, Pro or Elite. The Express can only create one monitor profile, but the Pro and Elite can do multiples.
- - - Updated - - -
Oh, I forgot, two more relevant pieces:
https://www.damiensymonds.net/2010/0...r-profile.html
https://www.damiensymonds.net/2011/0...ut-screen.html
"Fixable how? If it was fixable, wouldn't you have fixed it?
Trust me: https://www.damiensymonds.net/bridge-30-day-challenge"
Why should I trust you?
I said it was fixable by dropping the exposure. Very easy and not needed often.
I started reading your article and I have to say I was put off by the opening statement.
"I know that so many of you are out there, using Lightroom because you were told it’s what photographers use.
You’re patiently tolerating the useless clipping warnings, stoically turning on soft-proofing every time, bravely navigating the complicated filing system, and naively flicking back and forth between multiple editing programs; because you were told it’s what photographers do."
That doesn't apply to me and you don't seem at all interested in why I find lightroom so good, so you actually have no idea if I could find something else to be better. I'll give you a hint. I use LRTimelapse and Helicon Focus and I run multiple libraries of up to 100,000 photos, each. I try to keep that number down as it can slow things down.
But this is the point! That's completely unnecessary. In a Bridge workflow, you never have any nasty surprises, never have to go back and adjust Exposure.
Adobe have had ten years to fix these problems with Lightroom, and they continue to ignore it.
Please, try Bridge. You'll love a workflow without any ambiguity.
You don't get it do you. LRTimelapse is a product that works with LR. Helicon focus also integrates well with LR. LR has a superb workflow for my needs. You have given me no reason why I would bother changing. You don't even seem to have read what I have said.
We're having this (off-topic) conversation because you mentioned the colour space problems in Lightroom. They are known problems, and Adobe have made no effort to fix them. I'm simply telling you the solution. That is all.
I mentioned a small histogram problem (singular, not plural), and I said it was a small problem. You immediately said I should change to Bridge. I explained why not. You repeated your demand, ignoring my explanation. Your solution would create far more problems than it might solve.
Last edited by Steve Axford; 05-07-2017 at 2:21pm.
It's not a small histogram problem, it's a catastrophic histogram problem, and it's the reason why so many of us use Bridge instead of Lightroom.
You must have a different definition of catastrophe than I do.
All I care is that the photos I see on my screen match my printed photos. Between Tannin and Am, they have provided a more convenient solution to this happening than my original method. Some people are technical people who want to know exactly how, and why, everything works in the most minute details. Me, I'll take the most convenient solution which works FOR ME. The end result, is all I care about, and the only person it has to satisfy is me.
Last edited by farmmax; 05-07-2017 at 10:38pm.
My word I am. They have one great advantage: they actually work.
(I have commitments over the weekend but will get back to this thread with some detail when I get a chance.)