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-   -   Wolfie - Colour Managment investigation (https://www.worldphotographyforum.com/showthread.php?t=8033)

robski 07-01-15 01:14

Wolfie - Colour Managment investigation
 
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Hi Harry

First step is to check out the Spyder calibration

Right mouse click on the desktop and select "Screen resolution" option.

Then Select "Advance settings"

Then Select "Color Management" Tab and then "Color Management" button

Check that only the ICC profile generated by Spyder calibration is available for the monitor device

wolfie 07-01-15 17:30

Hi Rob There's only one profile listed, that being the Spyder profile.

Harry

Gidders 07-01-15 21:51

Ive been following this discussion with interest. I've downloaded the two robin images, loaded them into photoshop and sampled a few spots. Like Rob, within the tolerances of error the samples are the same.

My thinking is that its a browser issue rather than a system issue - what browser are you using? Have you tried a different one?

This page http://www.color.org/version4html.xalter will show you how well your browser is reading ICC profiles.

In firefox you might need to enable colour management see this page http://ntown.at/2013/12/28/firefox-color-management/ I've found that IE11 does a better job that firefox 34 even with colour management enabled but I've not tried Chrome or Safari

robski 07-01-15 22:11

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Ok Harry

To confirm my theory that your machine's colour management is over saturating an image that does not have an embedded ICC profile I have constructed a simple web page that contains the same image with and without an ICC profile embedded. Saved in Photoshop with and without the ICC Profile box ticked.

http://robertstocker.co.uk/Harry/test.html

another area to investigate is the "Advanced Tab" on The color management window(you were looking at the device tab earlier).
Do you have say wide gamut or Prophoto selected.

robski 07-01-15 22:15

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Hi Clive That was my first thought but when I was looking for a Colour management setting in the firefox browser I could not see anything.

Following your link Clive these are my settings in firefox 34.0.5 below. I see my setting is the default of only manage if image has a profile tag. I have never had to enable or disable colour management in the browser but I know there was talk some time back about handling profile. Harry's issue seem to be when a file does not have a profile as in the case of WPF generated images. Maybe Ollie can enable the feature to embed a sRGB profile. It only makes the file 3Kb bigger.

Maybe Harry has somehow got an inappropriate profile set in this config

I've just had a little play with these setting and restarted firefox and I can't see it has made any difference to the images in question.

Needle in a haystack comes to mind in knowing the cause of the problem.

wolfie 08-01-15 00:07

Rob you are correct the image without an ICC profile does look over saturated.

Following your comments to Clive and as I use Firefox I am now looking at the following site.
Sorry about the delay in reporting back, but I've had a long day at the health clinic with my daughter. Never seen so many people at the clinic and guess what, apart from the staff and my family just about everyone spoke a different language. Going to Boston Lincolnshire is like going to a foriegn country.

Harry

http://www.metalvortex.com/blog/2012/03/16/831.html

Harry

wolfie 08-01-15 00:44

Rob
Issue now solved many thanks. Here is what I did based on info provided by you.

I went to metalvortex.com, here I followed the instructions and set the GFX-colour management from the default of 2 (Enable color management for tagged graphics only. (Default)) to 1 (Enable color management for rendered graphics)

Now my robin looks the same in both large and small versions.

I've learnt a lot about colour management over the past few days. Fingers crossed that my brain will be able to retain this knowledge. :)

Again many thanks for your help in solving this problem.

Harry

robski 08-01-15 01:03

Yes you hear many languages spoken in my area too.

What I don't understand is why it appears to be applying colour management an object that does not have a colour management tag.

Maybe we are thinking about this the wrong way around.

It maybe with your monitor a non-colour managed object appears over-saturated and the colour is toned down on a managed object.

Try right clicking on my web page images to save them to your machine and view them in a picture viewer program rather than photoshop and see if the still look different. If they do that would rule out a browser issue.

robski 08-01-15 01:05

Good that you have solved it. My firefox has been set to 2 by default. I was unaware of the hidden settings.

Got there in the end :D

Gidders 08-01-15 01:56

Hi Rob/Harry

Looking at Rob's test image in firefox with it set to the default setting of 2 - I too see the image without the profile as over saturated when I view default them on my Eizo but on my laptop I cant see any difference. Resettiing it to the recommended 1 makes the images look the same.

Rob - you say you don't see any difference in your test image with colour management set to 2 - what screen are you using?

Incidently IE11 renders both images the same... but at the more saturated level, which I think confirms that IE doesn't support ICC profiles


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