![]() The issue can affect different applications in different ways, some not at all, some very badly. I CAN happen with Macs but with far less likelihood, it seems. Unfortunately, with Microsoft hardware: Windows updates, Graphics Card updates and Display manufacturers have a frustratingly growing reputation for installing useless (corrupted) monitor display profiles. ![]() Of course you must not expect accurate colour with programs such as Windows "Photos", because colour management is not implemented there so such programs are incapable of providing accurate image display. It'll only take a few minutes and is good troubleshooting.Īt least once a week on this forum we read about this, or very similar issues of appearance differing between colour managed applications. IF you see a visual difference in the same image between Lightroom and Photoshop then it COULD be the display profile, have a look at this advice: If neither applies, you can disregard these two. The other is the wrong monitor profile being used, in a setup using an external display together with an iMac/MBP (and possibly some Windows laptops). One is if you use custom/third-party camera profiles in Lightroom. There are two unresolved bugs that can also cause a difference. The way to control this is to use a calibrator to make the monitor profile. ![]() This can happen suddenly and out of the blue, if you get a bad manufacturer monitor profile through Windows Update. If Lightroom and Photoshop do not display identically, it's usually a defective monitor profile.ProPhoto just happens to be the factory default for Lightroom's Edit in Photoshop, you can change that to whatever you want. Lightroom's internal color space is not the same as ProPhoto RGB in any case - one has linear gamma and the other 1.8, so there is already a color space conversion happening under the covers. There is no particular significance to ProPhoto RGB in this equation.You don't need to use any particular color space. As long as there is a profile, whatever it is, it will be correctly handled in Photoshop. Lightroom and Photoshop color settings do not need to match.Because Adobe Camera Raw does support CMYK profiles, both as a profile selection in Workflow Options (for soft-proofing and handing back to Photoshop), and when saving a copy of the document. If the lack of support for CMYK in Lightroom is a problem for your workflow, you might want to describe what it is you want to do with this image in Lightroom if it’s a task you could do just as well in Adobe Camera Raw, you might try doing it there instead. What is the current color profile of the exported file that looks wrong? If you aren’t sure, set the status bar at the bottom of the Photoshop document window to Document Profile. It was probably converted into whatever RGB profile was selected in the Export dialog box in Lightroom Classic. So if you exported the file through that dialog box, it isn’t CMYK anymore, and that is probably a major reason the colors look different. The last question is important, because Lightroom Classic exports in RGB only a CMYK profile cannot be selected in the Export dialog box in Lightroom Classic. Here is where we need to take a closer look: First, is this in Lightroom Classic, not cloud-based Lightroom? Exactly how do you export from Lightroom into Photoshop, what were your export settings, especially the Color Space? But now going back to my standard process of exporting from Lightroom into Photoshop the colours are all wrong ![]() This comes into play in your example with had to change my colour profile in Photoshop to a CMYK (iso coated v2 300%) for an advert I was creating. If a document already has an embedded color profile, the Working Space doesn’t apply instead Photoshop uses the document’s embedded profile, as it should. However, keep in mind that Working Spaces are just defaults. For example in the United States, the default Settings preset is North American General Purpose 2, which sets the RGB working space to sRGB, and the CMYK working space to US Web Coated (SWOP) v2. The default Working Spaces for RGB and CMYK in Photoshop are set by the default preset in the Settings menu, which depends on your region of the world. Is the Default values for 'Working Spaces' ?
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