On dimanche 16 juin 2019 13:14:13 CEST Kneops wrote:
> About this:
> > I guess you could set sRGB as the soft proofing & gamut-check profile
> > to see (an approximation of) how the picture will look in sRGB and
> > what's out of gamut for sRGB, respectively.
>
> When I have my display in
On Sun, 16 Jun 2019 13:14:13 +0200
Kneops wrote:
> Actually, no matter what combination I
> choose (srgb as monitor display and adobe as
> softproof or the other way around) I always
> get to see colors that are out of gamut. I
> don't understand how this works.
One thing are the colors
About this:
> I guess you could set sRGB as the soft proofing & gamut-check profile
> to see (an approximation of) how the picture will look in sRGB and
> what's out of gamut for sRGB, respectively.
When I have my display in Gamut Checking set to my system display or
explicitely to my monitor