OK, here's a colour management problem that's been driving me nuts. I imagine others have struggled with this as well:
To start with, I have a calibrated monitor -- I use a Spyder2, and it seems to work fine. I can make prints that look just like what I see on the screen, and that's good.
The hassles begin when I make images for the web. I want to make them look more or less like the print image, on the regular public's un-color-managed computers. Here's what I do:
1. Convert the photo (that I've just tweaked for printing) from AdobeRGB to sRGB.
2. Change my monitor profile from the calibrated Spyder one to the one that came with the machine (to make it more or less like the average computer).
3. Soft-proof the photo using the monitor setting.
4. Re-tweak the photo. It usually needs a saturation boost, a shift towards yellow and a bit towards red, and a little contrast curving.
5. Save the photo for the web, without an embedded profile.
This works fine, but it's a pain. Isn't there an easier way? If I know the details of the first profile (the custom one) and the second profile (the stock one), there should be a mathematical way of converting between the two, similar to converting between AdobeRGB and sRGB colour spaces (see step 1 above). I'd change the photograph to compensate for the differences in viewing conditions imposed by the two monitor profiles. Net result:
1. Auto-run the converter (hopefully a PS action). I feed it a photo in AdobeRGB, the source and destination monitor profiles, and it spits out a newly tweaked image, all ready for the web. It won't be perfect, but that's OK -- the user's computers aren't perfect either.
Any thoughts from the colour management experts out there? I could be quite out-to-lunch here. I'm hoping that there's an established method, so I could just use that. I've searched long and hard, but I haven't found anything. I could tweak some actions visually to do more or less the same thing, but it strikes me that there's a better way ...
Thanks for reading!
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