See my response to Jon Mitchell in sRGB vs Adobe RGB.
Chuck Norcutt
Bob Whitmire wrote:
> Try this. If you print exclusively through professional labs, and
> they require sRGB, then work the whole way in sRGB from capture to
> final file. That way things look right all the way through. (No, I
> don't know why they use sRGB instead of Adobe, which has the wider
> color rendition. Maybe it's just old habit. And I'll betcha Chuck
> will weigh in here to educate me, so much the better. <g>) If you do
> a lot of your own printing, especially on higher end inkjets such as
> Epson's 38 series and beyond, work in Adobe RGB 'cause that's what
> your printer likes best, and that's what will give you the best results.
>
> And remember, you can convert from Adobe RGB to sRGB just fine
> because you're subtracting color. You get squirrely results going
> from sRGB to Adobe RGB because you can't add what isn't there.
>
> --Bob Whitmire
> Talking Over His Head Since the Memory of Man Runneth Not to the
> Contrary
> www.bwp33.com
>
>
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