Sep-21-2022, 06:04 AM
Skaperen,
I would hesitate to start tampering with my browser's color space settings.
Any photographer that puts jpegs online knows that he has to use sRGB, because
otherwise the image looks dull. If you manipulate the browser, maybe the bona fide sRGBs will now look dull.
As I said, a device that creates a pic (eg; a camera) delivers the pic with an "embedded" color space.
How to discover that in pngs or the likes, i do not know.
I did do a test a moment ago (in Lightroom) to see what kind of image extensions were available to
export into sRGB, and only jpg, tif, dng and psd were in the dropdown. dng and psd not being suited for online display.
So no bmp or png for that matter.
Maybe ask some color space specialist for advice, but they are few and very far between.
Paul
I would hesitate to start tampering with my browser's color space settings.
Any photographer that puts jpegs online knows that he has to use sRGB, because
otherwise the image looks dull. If you manipulate the browser, maybe the bona fide sRGBs will now look dull.
As I said, a device that creates a pic (eg; a camera) delivers the pic with an "embedded" color space.
How to discover that in pngs or the likes, i do not know.
I did do a test a moment ago (in Lightroom) to see what kind of image extensions were available to
export into sRGB, and only jpg, tif, dng and psd were in the dropdown. dng and psd not being suited for online display.
So no bmp or png for that matter.
Maybe ask some color space specialist for advice, but they are few and very far between.
Paul
It is more important to do the right thing, than to do the thing right.(P.Drucker)
Better is the enemy of good. (Montesquieu) = French version for 'kiss'.
Better is the enemy of good. (Montesquieu) = French version for 'kiss'.