Lastly, give up any illusion you can control what your audience sees. Lightroom always does this as digital dog notes, but Photoshop can be coerced into exporting without a profile. When exporting images, always include the icc profile. On Macs almost everything is color managed and so there you have to worry less but you should still do 1 and 2Ĥ. They will NEVER show you the correct color no matter what you do. This includes internet explorer and other browsers in their default setting.
On windows that means almost all built-in stuff should NOT be used to view images. In general choose a icc v2 profile for the calibration profile except if you know all your apps will support v4 and/or LUT-based profilesģ. If your screen is wide gamut, make sure your calibrator supports it. Calibrate your display using recent calibration hardware. It always embeds an ICC profile.ĭavid, there are only a few rules to get correct color:ġ. And that is where color mismatches can show up even with ICC aware applications. So they have to assume something and usually it is sRGB (or ugh, the display profile). There's no description of the color space, the scale of the RGB numbers. LR cannot produce an untagged document but Photoshop and other applications can and this is a huge problem. ALL RGB color spaces with tagged profiles will preview correctly as seen in Photoshop, LR etc. With ICC aware applications, it is absolutely not necessary to export sRGB. Profiles can get wonky (the technical term for corrupted ) so regeneration or simply deleting the profile can sometimes fix the issue. So if you're absolutely sure the application is color aware, regenerate a new display profile and try differing settings (V2, Matrix). Some don't do well with LUT built profiles. Some applications do not deal well with V4 generated display profiles. IF colors do not match what you see from Lightroom, Photoshop or ICC aware applications/web browsers like Safari etc, then they are likely not color managed OR, there can be issues with how they deal with the display profile. It really keeps me from editing photos when I don't know what they look like later. However, when I originally did that it did not change a thing, so I am not sure what caused the change. I have also forced the laptop to use the dedicated graphics card for all apps and then, just to be sure, forced it specifically to use the GPU for LR and FS. The Screen Color is now set to Brillant (complete/full). I played a bit with Dell PremiumColor but eventually reset all changes to default. Now, the photo also looks saturated in LR. Unfortunately not in the "direction" I wanted. Weirdly, just now, the difference is gone. When I viewed them in Chrome, they looked like in LR. Originally, photos were much more saturated after export, especially the warm colors. should be sensitive to the color profile). I use a Dell with 4k screen, edit Photos in LR CC and view in Fast Stone Image Viewer 6.4 (with Color Management System active, i.e. Welcome to the forum, it would be best if you create a new thread and describe the problem you are experiencing and include your system info and other pertinent info and in this respect you can have a look into the community guidelines for additional info. Quote “ This issue is persistent pain in the posterior “ is of little help to either of us.
So it's important to get specifics including your problem and what steps you have taken to solve your problem. This thread is over two years old and there have been significant changes to the Lightroom Classic application. The only way we can provide assistance is if you are prepared to share specifics of your operating system and the application and version number you are using.
At coreg60, just so you are aware this is a user to user forum so the responses, assistance or advice you receive in the forum are from users like yourself and Adobe Community Professional is designated to volunteers in the forum who have freely assistance over several years, they are not staff or employees of Adobe.