There is no "typical"; each company uses their own methods. But yes, you can get results where out of gamut colors are brought into gamut with equal priority to hue, saturation, and brightness by choosing Relative Colorimetric. C. D. Tobie WW Product Technology Mngr. Digital Imaging & Home Theater DataColor.com CDTobie@... On Nov 9, 2008, at 3:57 PM, "John Arnold" <john.arnold@...> wrote: > --- In colorvision_group@yahoogroups.com, Cdtobie <CDTobie@...> wrote: >> >> The metal "SuiteCase" only comes with the S3 Studio suite. But it's a >> great deal: you get S3 Elite and the case both tossed in for the >> additional hundred bucks... >> > > Thanks for clarifying that. By the way, I understand that the way > your profiles are > constructed that they are optimized to provide the best results > when choosing > "saturation" as the rendering intent. If however, you choose instead > to use "relative", does > the profile respond more or less like any other profile when you > choose "relative" or does > it too have unusual characteristics that would not normally be > associated with a relative > rendering intent. > > In other words, I know that choosing "saturation" with your profiles > yields different results > than what one would normally get with typical profiles. Is the same > true of "relative" or > does it behave more characteristically. > > Hope that question makes sense. > > Thanks, > > John > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > >
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Re: [colorvision_group] Re: Spyder 3 Print vs. Other Choices
2008-11-10 by Cdtobie
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