Comments on: Lightroom Color Spaces: Everything You Need to Know https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/ Digital Photography Tips and Tutorials Wed, 08 May 2024 19:27:53 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 By: Christian Piason https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-779671 Wed, 05 Oct 2022 21:58:37 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-779671 why the develop menu works in prophotoRGB if after that, when you export or change to the library set you no gonna be able to see all the colors and things you are using at your edition? i am very frustraded because always when i go more deep in my edition, when I finish and change to the menu library or even when i export, the photo never looks like i was editing on the develop menu. That means that you cannot trust in what you see on your editing because this range of possibilities will never be seeing. It is always worst then what you are doing on your edition because monitors and printers and even the lightrrom cannot gives the final job as he looks like at the develop menu
. really no make no sense to me. why you work in prophotoRGB if no printer or no monitor can see this range of posibilties? is there anyway in lightroom to be able to see and work with the quality you gonna have at the end? i mean, you edit your photo and the photo look like exactly how it looks at the develop menu? Because if not is just very frustrated be editing to a level that you not gonna be able to see at the end. really no make no sense to me

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By: Mike Mish Shedlock https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-748335 Fri, 08 Mar 2019 02:41:52 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-748335 In reply to Inita Bite.

I had the same problem and I have a color corrected monitor. My images print the way they look on my screen. But exporting to Jpegs destroyed many of them.

I use ProPhoto RGB – When I export with either that of sRGB the Jpegs often look terrible.

I took some of those that looked terrible and exported to AdobeRGB they look much, much better

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By: Deborah R. https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-744929 Thu, 29 Nov 2018 11:49:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-744929 In reply to Ryan Yzquierdo.

I have been having similar issues as well! This article has been extremely helpful in better understanding color management, but I’m still not sure how best to edit my photos so that what I see in LR is what I will get in my export (instead, I end up doing several test exports when I almost done w/ my editing). My computer’s color space is “Color LCD” (the default on my mac), and it does show Adobe RGB and ProPhoto RGB display profiles, but when I select those it changes the tone of the display very drastically (a significant pale blue tint), so I don’t use them. I’d love to speed up my editing time by knowing that what I’m seeing as my final edit is what my clients will receive instead of having to do so many (or any!) test exports.

Also, I wanted to put together a small photo book for a friend for the holidays, and I’m pretty confused as to how to make sure it looks like what I’ve edited. If my monitor/the display profile my computer uses is sRGB, I’m editing the photos in ProPhoto RGB (LR/PS), and I’m not sure if an online vendor (like Shutterfly) may be more likely to do the printing in Adobe RGB or sRGB, is it still best to edit in ProPhoto RGB and export to sRGB?

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By: MajesticBeardsman https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-736200 Wed, 31 Jan 2018 01:22:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-736200 In reply to Andrew S. Gibson.

How does one overcome the issue of ‘images looking different/too dark’ in windows(10) image viewer? My images look perfect in Lr but as others have said, look bad or just different in windows. They seem to look ok when uploaded to facebook etc but still, it would be nice if they look correct in windows too.

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By: Ryan Yzquierdo https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-731151 Fri, 22 Sep 2017 17:34:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-731151 In reply to Pete L..

I’m having the same issue and can’t figure out what I’m doing wrong. I’m coming from the very old Photoshop 7 / ImageReady that I’ve been using for far too long, and am having trouble wrapping my head around how to properly use Lightroom. In ImageReady, which is where I have been doing most of my photo cropping and adjustments for photos for my business’ website (yes, ImageReady … I have a fantastic process down pat that has worked extremely well for the past 13 years or so). But I know I need to use a more modern program and have been making myself use Lightroom the past couple of months, which I purchased two years ago.

ImageReady is a what you see is what you get program … in all browsers, in all photo viewing programs in Windows, etc. This is very important for me since 99% of what I do ends up on the web for my business. However, with Lightroom, the color profiles of the exported JPEGs from the ARW (Raw Sony files) throw me off because some programs utilize the color profiles and some don’t. ImageReady, which I still use for additional image tools, and Google Chrome are two of the programs I use that do not read the color profiles of the JPEGs created by Lightroom. Chrome is the bigger concern because I use it for the web, as do many other people on my website.

I just want to flatten the color profile or discard it (or whatever the term is) so that it’s like the final images I get out of ImageReady. I don’t care about color profiles and just want the WYSIWYG experience I’ve had from ImageReady for the past 13 years.

While I’m thrilled with what I’ve been able to accomplish with Lightroom on my computer, it accomplishes nothing if all of that work in Lightroom doesn’t display properly in Chrome when viewing images from my website. Confused and frustrated!

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By: Cicero Rodrigues https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-726324 Sun, 14 May 2017 16:26:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-726324 Hi Andrew,

Congratulations for your excelent article !

In Adobe Bridge I have the option of displaying the color profile of an image.
When I am editing other formats than RAW, I would like to know what color profile is embeded.

This should be possible in View / View Options…
But there no no such option.

Does someone know where can I visualize that information (the color profile) in LR ?

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By: pete guaron https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-725972 Sat, 06 May 2017 02:47:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-725972 Confused? Your article has had quite the opposite effect on me, Andrew. Thanks very much for your explanation, and I only wish I’d read it years ago!

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By: Ludo https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-715579 Thu, 22 Sep 2016 14:17:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-715579 In reply to Andrew S. Gibson.

“have faith that the way Lightroom handles colour space works”

It doesn’t – at least not in my case. When I’m editing and viewing files in LR and then exporting them as sRGB, the color shades in shadows looks noticeably different – I’m guessing due to the color profiles conversion.

Also don’t be fooled when you open the extracted sRGB file in LR – it seems to change it – for whatever reason – for it to look like the one with the adjustments.

You can do your reality check though if you “Edit in” > “Adobe Photoshop” > “Edit a copy with LR adjustments” and then open in PS the file extracted as sRGB and the chances are, you will see noticeable differences in colors.

So if you’re doing some complex adjustments in LR with the aim for white balance to be as neutral as possible (for commercial photos for example), with lots of shadows present and with the goal for the image to be exported as sRGB, then it seems the LR’s ProPhoto RGB will do you more harm than good.

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By: Pete L. https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-714886 Tue, 06 Sep 2016 12:42:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-714886 Does anyone know why an exported JPG looks different on my monitor than how the photo appears in Lightroom or PS when my monitor can only display sRGB (and not even 100% of sRGB)?

Exports (100% quality and size) always look like they have added contrast (compared to how they look in LR and PS) and it ends up losing detail in the shadows. Very frustrating.

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By: Randy Levine https://digital-photography-school.com/everything-need-know-lightroom-colour-space/comment-page-1/#comment-709804 Sun, 12 Jun 2016 22:57:00 +0000 https://digital-photography-school.com/?p=73300#comment-709804 In reply to Andrew S. Gibson.

Thanks Andrew! I needed that reality check. 🙂 … Yes, I have decided to set Photoshop and ACR to match Lightroom to Pro Photo, then save the image to the colorspace of it’s intended use.

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