
If I put that image up online and view on an iMac using Firefox or Google Chrome browsers then they look very similar to the original image when viewed in Photoshop. I have tested that with an image of my own: In Photoshop, convert the original to sRGB then save with the sRGB profile embedded. Those are “document colour spaces” (in “Adobe speak” images are documents). Fosse mentions the “Standard color spaces - sRGB, Adobe RGB and ProPhoto” His description is helpful for you I hope. Fosse is right, this is why colourmanagement was invented. without this recalculation, without color management, different displays will display the very same RGB numbers unpredictably, in wildly different ways.this is done by Photoshop on the fly, as you work, without any user intervention.The numbers are recalculated so that color appearance remains correct. the application's color management module then converts (remaps) the original RGB numbers from the source color space, to the display color space, using both these profiles.This profile is normally made with a calibrator, measuring the displays's response, but the system will basically work with a generic profile that isn't too far off (although less accurate).


Real memory used by Lightroom: 1 216,0 MB (7,4%) Real memory available to Lightroom: 16 384,0 MB You can see it here:ġ) Dropbox - Screenshot 22.08.25.png (this is what I see in develop)Ģ) Dropbox - Screenshot 22.08.15.png (but this is what I see in Library and in export) When I edit Photo and than I go to the view mod, i see some changes in Photos. Hi, only some Photos, where is big contrast I see different in Develop modul after editin.
