Views
140
Replies
4
Status
Closed
I have read this in Photoshop Techiniques Forum:
"According to Adobe (and other sources I’ve read) Photoshop uses CIEL*a*b as the base encoding method for all photoshop documents. This means that if you are working in RGB, you are actually working in L*a*b and it’s being translated to RGB. This is why the transformation from RGB to L*a*b is so quick and seamless. It’s just changing the interface, not the data. When you move to CMYK, you are changing the data into L*a*b and then converting the color space into CMYK."
I NEVER, EVER rear such thing in my life. Any official comments? Many thank’s for any reply.
Adriano
"According to Adobe (and other sources I’ve read) Photoshop uses CIEL*a*b as the base encoding method for all photoshop documents. This means that if you are working in RGB, you are actually working in L*a*b and it’s being translated to RGB. This is why the transformation from RGB to L*a*b is so quick and seamless. It’s just changing the interface, not the data. When you move to CMYK, you are changing the data into L*a*b and then converting the color space into CMYK."
I NEVER, EVER rear such thing in my life. Any official comments? Many thank’s for any reply.
Adriano
Related Tags
Master Retouching Hair
Learn how to rescue details, remove flyaways, add volume, and enhance the definition of hair in any photo. We break down every tool and technique in Photoshop to get picture-perfect hair, every time.