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William
28-05-2012, 10:57am
Just checking some different colour settings called rendering intent that can be set in PS , The top one is Relative Colorimetric output and the second is Perceptual

Thoughts anyone ? On my monitor the colorimetric version looks darker by just a tad that Perceptual , Both jpegs were taken from the same tif file that was Perceptual

CAP
28-05-2012, 2:51pm
I'm struggling to notice any difference, esspecially with the open/close...... open/close scenario.
Anyway you can stick'em together in another edit and post as a single side by side?

ameerat42
28-05-2012, 8:31pm
William.
I didn't try to struggle, and took them both into Photoshop. I pasted the first in a new image, then copied the 2nd and then pasted it over the first.
I did a Ctrl-Z a few times and even switched the 2nd layer on and off.

The ONE THING that stood out was that the watermark changed position slightly. (And that was the only thing.:D)

(So that's what it's all about. I thought.)
Am.

Kieran
28-05-2012, 9:03pm
William,
The relative is slightly darker across all the colours from black through to almost white. I cant see anywhere in the scene where the white is greater on the perceptual though. I'm not sure that I have seen many of your scenes with a narrow colour range, which is I believe a prime reason to use Relative Colourimetric Intent. There are probably other reasons to use it though
Kieran

arthurking83
28-05-2012, 11:18pm
Even on my pathetic monitor, I see a very slight difference in saturation(better in the upper image) in the red and green channel.

Upper RH corner in the upper image has slightly more saturated red sections in the clouds, and in the brown sand in the lower LH corner too.

Also the green water in the depression of water in front of the building has a touch more saturation in the top image.

If I had to put a single value on them in terms of difference(this is going by my experience with my preferred software tho!)

.. I think the upper image has about 5-10% more saturation/contrast. It's probably closer to 5% tho.

ricktas
29-05-2012, 7:28am
You also have to remember that what we see posted on the net, is via our web browsers and THEIR colour management. Some browsers can be colourspace aware, but that does not mean they can read the rendering intent, so we may not be seeing what you are seeing at home, on your colour managed desktop. By inclusion of viewing on the net, we are adding another factor into this equation that makes it more complex once again.

William
29-05-2012, 10:31am
William,
The relative is slightly darker across all the colours from black through to almost white. I cant see anywhere in the scene where the white is greater on the perceptual though. I'm not sure that I have seen many of your scenes with a narrow colour range, which is I believe a prime reason to use Relative Colourimetric Intent. There are probably other reasons to use it though
Kieran

Kieran, and Arthur, I'd have to agree that the top one has a better look to it as well

@ Kieran, What do you use ? I think I may change it(PS) back to Colorimetric

Kieran
29-05-2012, 1:42pm
William, "I use" this forum and all threads to learn. Do you remember Hogan's Heroes. Well I am photography's answer to Sergeant Schultz...."I know nossink..."
i simply googled the different colour intent to find out what you were talking about.

I was surprised that my little mac notebook screen could see differences when others couldn't. I have been calibrating it once a week since starting on the forum to get used to the adjustments. Perhaps I have got it to a stage where it isn't too bad.

From my little google effort last night it seemed that selecting different colour intent was more an issue of being able to get the same colours out of your printer than what appears on the screen. I may be a useful thing to see whether colour intensity and bright-dark scales when posted on the forum get back a range of results depending on the upload settings and the browser settings of a range of members

By the way, I really like your daily uploads. One per day will get me through any Melbourne winter

CapnBloodbeard
08-03-2013, 3:26pm
The relative has a bit more contrast. The blacks are a bit deeper, the orange on the rocks is a bit more vibrant.

I prefer the top - but that's on an uncalibrated, cheap work monitor, so I can't really judge if it's overly saturated.