ErikKaffehr
Well-known member
Hi Wayne,
I would say that is exactly what "perceptional rendering intent" is expected to do. Relative colorimetric is expected to leave colours unaffected.
I think there can be a disconnect between rendition of what we can see on screen and in print, but soft proofing should display a decent estimate of the print, although it cannot show colours within the printer gamut but outside screen gamut.
Best regards
Erik
I would say that is exactly what "perceptional rendering intent" is expected to do. Relative colorimetric is expected to leave colours unaffected.
I think there can be a disconnect between rendition of what we can see on screen and in print, but soft proofing should display a decent estimate of the print, although it cannot show colours within the printer gamut but outside screen gamut.
Best regards
Erik
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The entire concept of color management is allowing the device profiles to manipulate the colors into the visible output space, so even though we can't "see" a color, the way it is rendered allows us to see the colors as they relate to each other, which is more important in the scheme of human vision that the actual color that might be there scientifically.