- Thu Aug 09, 2012 2:55 am
#359518
The HP and some others can (I attached a gamut chart earlier) display Adobe RGB (1998) easily. And then some. Because one can treat Maxwell Render like a real digital pro camera (which is why we all love it), it would be a shame using it only to render into the limited 8-bit sRGB colour space, unless that's all one needs of course.
But but but... :mrgreen:
Do they have the monitor itself set to the (probably default from factory) sRGB mode, OR, have they set it to AdobeRGB mode as well? If you've left your high end monitor in sRGB mode, and hoping to work well with colors in PS, even if its working space is set to AdobeRGB....you won't actually have those wide gamut colors displayed.
I'm not sure how it works exactly but depending on the monitor, some wide gamut monitors emulate sRGB space better than others, because they have to restrict the colors they display somehow, to fall within sRGB gamut. And in fact they will display a more accurate sRGB emulation (and your calibrated sRGB monitor profile will work better) if you set the monitor to sRGB mode, if you intend to work in that color space.