![]() ![]() ![]() Image colour space is information describing the storage of colorimetric image information. Judging by what you say (you are seeing more saturated colours with AppleRGB) you are artificially mismanaging your image information using Photoshop/Aperture/whatever. In particular, Adobe RGB is more saturated while Color LCD is more washed out. I found that Color LCD and Apple RGB are the best, at least for me. Many modern displays conform to sRGB well but from those which don't only a small fraction is profiled. They will display images correctly in 100% of cases given that: Typically a web browser is not set up correctly for correctly viewing colorimetric images by default, neither Chrome nor Firefox are (I have not researched other browsers). Thanks to standardisation work It does not depend on the OS but it does depend on the particular software used and whether the display conforms to sRGB or is profiled if it does not. The question now is this: considering I have friends with both windows and osx, what is it likely they see? ![]() Other than that you can never be sure that the audience will see exactly what you do because not all software respects ICC standards and not all displays are profiled/calibrated. There are no other ways of making yourself sure you are seeing actual colour as defined by ICC. you profile your screen with a colorimeter or spectrometer and select the profile as your display profile.you look at the specifications of your display to learn what colour profile it was factory-calibrated against and select it as display profile (refer to your OS manuals to learn how it is done or this SU question).How do I know if what the audience see is the same I see with the color profile on my macbook?ĭisplay profile is information describing your display colour output behaviour. ![]() What is the most accurate color profile with the new macbook? ![]()
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