Consistent Colors in Digital Workflows: An Introduction to Color Management

Not all images are created equally! Instagram, Flickr, Facebook and LFI all provide ways to share your images online, so your images could be seen on various computer displays, phones and tablets – all containing different types of screens. Blurb and Artifact Uprising are two on-line self-publishing book companies where you can have your images bound in print with different paper types. You can order prints on many more paper types, metals and under acrylic or even print them yourself on inkjet printing systems. Did you know that using the same image with no adjustments for all of these would not produce images  that  looked the same? If you are not sure what sRGB, Adobe RGB and ProPhoto RGB are, this article is for you!

Before digital photography became mainstream and film was the media for making images, the photographer was also a physicist and chemist. The camera exposed film and the photographer developed it. The chemistry was the black box that converted the exposure to a permanent image. While a negative could be manipulated somewhat when printing, the choices were made much earlier in the process. Today, in the digital world, the photographer no longer needs a chemistry background because the black box is now the computer chip inside the camera developing each pixel on the sensor to create a digital negative file (DNG or RAW). However, a digital file allows for almost infinite manipulation. Each pixel can be adjusted – for color and brightness – without impacting the pixel beside it. Computer noise can be added or subtracted and the resulting image can be made bigger by adding pixels or smaller by removing them.

One item remains the same. Photography is meant for viewing, for sharing and for preserving an image. The most complex step for processing a digital image after exposure is color. Even the LCD screen on the back of a camera presents colors differently than a computer screen, an internet browser, a print or a book. Because none of these ways we view an image shows colors the same way, you need to understand color spaces and how to use them in your workflow.

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Deep Depth of Field in Low Light