Quote:
Originally Posted by yelvertoft
... but would advise against using Adobe RGB for output, a domestic inkjet can't cope with that gamut.
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While I agree that the domestic inkjet printer can not render the full Adobe RGB gamut, I believe the using Adobe RGB as a
workspace gamut is a good thing because more of the colour information is preserved while the image is being post processed. When the time come to print the image, the software will convert the workspace gamut to the printer gamut via a rendering intent - ususally 'relative colourmetric' although there are other options.
After all you've bought a upteen million pixel DSLR, high quality optics, you're shooting in RAW for maximum information capture (aren't you

) so why would you want to through away colour information at an early stage in the post processing
For more on this see here
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