Discrepancy in color between Photoshop window and print window

RW
Posted By
Roel Wyman
Sep 22, 2003
Views
97
Replies
3
Status
Closed
My photos look very dark and saturated when I load them in Photoshop 7 or Photoshop Elements 2.0, but when viewed in the printer’s preview window (not the Photoshop preview window) they are normal, and they are printed in a normal fashion. This does not happen in Photodeluxe or any of a half-dozen other picture editors or viewers I have checked, and it means that I can’t edit my photos in Photoshop because I don’t know what they really look like!

How can I "reset" Photoshop’s parameters so that the photo is not altered in its screen view before I even touch it?

Thanks

Roel

How to Improve Photoshop Performance

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P
Phosphor
Sep 22, 2003
From your description, it sounds as though you need to do some calibration of your monitor. PS 7.0 and Elements (also based on PS 7.0) are both color managed applications, which would not be true of the other applications or previewers you’ve used.

Ian Lyons does an extremely good job of explaining the issue of color management on his website, Computer Darkroom, and provides step by step instructions for calibrating your monitor so that what you’re seeing on the screen is consistent with the prints you get. I strongly recommend you take a look at what he has to say. He says it much better than anybody here!

<http://www.computer-darkroom.com/ps7-colour/ps7_1.htm>
JH
Jim Hess
Sep 22, 2003
If you go to the Adobe Photoshop Expert Center and look under "Color Management" (I think) you will find a tutorial on how to use Adobe Gamma and then do some other things inside of Photoshop that will help you resolve this problem. The tutorial indicates that you need Photoshop 7, but it also works for Photoshop 6. After you get everything set up, you can then use "soft proofing" and I have found that the colors and everything else match very closely. For those of you who are only using Photoshop Elements, to go looking for the soft proofing features because they simply are not there. You need a full version of Photoshop to use the soft proofing features.
RW
Roel Wyman
Sep 24, 2003
Thanks to Beth and Jim for leading me to the solution. I right-clicked on the Windows desktop and selected properties – settings – advanced – colour management – add colour profile and added the sRGB colour space profile and selected it. All my problems were instantly solved!

This can also be done within colour management from within the programs, but by setting the monitor properly all programs displayed much better immediately.

Thanks again.

Roel

How to Improve Photoshop Performance

Learn how to optimize Photoshop for maximum speed, troubleshoot common issues, and keep your projects organized so that you can work faster than ever before!

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