Photography Asked by S. M. on February 9, 2021
I have finally pulled the trigger and got the monthly subscription for the PS + Lightroom CC. Yesterday when exporting the photo from lightroom I noticed a huge color difference when viewed with the Photos app. The photo is shifted more to red and there is a huge visible difference with what I see in lightroom before export.
Opening with Windows Photo Viewer however renders the colors fine. However, if I set the photo as desktop background it goes back to the reddish color. It is somewhat annoying to have such a discrepancy across the apps.
I have Dell U3014 monitor that was calibrated off the factory and never had this issue before. I could invest into color calibration tool, but they are rather expensive and I’d like to understand better what would that help me with. Also not sure I understand how color calibrating monitor will solve the issue of the same image being rendered differently on the same monitor. My understanding is that color calibration calibrates the color on the monitor with the color that you would see on the print. (?)
I have also tried exporting the photo with the older version of lightroom and it has the same issue, so it’s not the lightroom version per se, but I wonder if something in the Lighroom CC installation screwed something up.
Could you please help me understand what is the cause of this and how can one solve this problem?
Thank you.
See my comments here http://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/83613/colour-spaces-accross-different-monitors
. You need to profile your Dell display with an x-Rite i1 Display pro. That is the issue. You can rent for around $15 bucks. You are not seeing the true color until you calibrate - regardless of how the monitor came from the factory. It makes a substantial difference on the correct profile is used.
Answered by Gmck on February 9, 2021
A common cause of images appearing very different in two different applications is the use of different colour spaces when saving the image, some viewing applications do not respect the colour space recorded in the image and use a standard one (usually sRGB).
The approach to dealing with this will depend what you intend to do with the images.
If you're planning for the image to primarily be displayed on your own screen, pick the profile which works best for you (and just avoid apps which don't display the image properly).
If your planning on printing the image, then calibrate your display and only use apps which respect the profile in the image.
If you're planning on your images being displayed on other people's screens (particularly over the web) then you're pretty much stuck with sRGB as the defacto standard.
Answered by Harry Harrison on February 9, 2021
An illustration of the problem is shown in this question, and the solution is the same:
This is the result of an improper OS-level color management setting. Following these instructions fixes it:
Answered by feetwet on February 9, 2021
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