As I understand it's only worth using Adobe RGB if your monitor can display it and most generic screens can't.
Actually, if you post-process images or print them on a better printer then you can still benefit from using AdobeRGB.
You can always convert from AdobeRGB to sRGB, but not the opposite.
- if you want to use images just as captured by camera and don't do any post-processing - use sRGB
- if you import them to Lightroom or similar colour managed tool and then export them for web use, it might be better to use AdobeRGB (or even better shoot RAW).
OK, so I shoot Raw and if I use Adobe RGB in Lightroom on my Mac or MacBook Pro that can't properly display Adobe RGB will the printed colours look different to my screen?
whats the difference sRGB and Adobe RGB ?
what one do use and when ?
thanks
OK, so I shoot Raw and if I use Adobe RGB in Lightroom on my Mac or MacBook Pro that can't properly display Adobe RGB will the printed colours look different to my screen?
Hi,when u say you use neither,i understand that LR uses its own prophoto but in your camera you have a choice ,what is yours set to and are you saying it makes no difference if you are pp in LR?These are colour spaces for encoding colour on your pictures. I suggest to google the topic, you'll find many good sites describing the difference.
In a nutshell. sRGB is more common, but AdobeRGB can capture more colour information in some scenes and is more suitable if you plan to do post-processing.
I use neither of them as I shoot in RAW format and process pictures in Lightroom (which internally use even wider colour space than Adobe RGB). Only when sharing pictures I export them to sRGB or to DCI-P3.
Hi,when u say you use neither,i understand that LR uses its own prophoto but in your camera you have a choice ,what is yours set to and are you saying it makes no difference if you are pp in LR?
Interesting,so camera manufactures could in the menu if you set raw ,grey out the choice to make it clearer?
Thanks Neil,what I meant was because of that there shouldn't be an option to choose it in the menu if Raw is chosen in camera menu that isRAW files do not have a colour space assigned. You have to do that yourself via PP.
The in-camera colour space setting is for the camera produced Jpeg 8 bit files only.
It still produces a jpeg which is embedded in the raw file. This is what you see on the rear view and what the histograms and blinkies are calculated from. tbh I don't know whether the colour space is assigned to these or not (but would guess they are), nor do I know what impact each would have on the associated calculations.Thanks Neil,what I meant was because of that there shouldn't be an option to choose it in the menu if Raw is chosen in camera menu that is
It seems quite confusing but that's probably just me lol