raw camera profiles

Why change my color photographs Photoshop and Firefox?
I am a photographer and I had problems with change of color between Photoshop CS4 and Firefox, but the colors remain the same in IrfanView and Safari. I use Windows XP and I have two monitors Samsung SyncMaster (205BW & 730B) calibrated with a Huey Pro. I shoot with a Nikon D90 in RAW sRGB, the import of "Nikon Transfer", seen in Nikon "ViewNX", opened with Adobe Camera Raw 8bit sRGB and then adjusted with Photoshop CS4 in the sRGB working space and to make the embedded profile. I set Firefox to read and use of color profiles and yet I still get a change. Here's a screenshot: I http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1270/4680201843_c274478d3e_b.jpg trying to get this right to work for a few weeks without success, so I really hope someone here knows what is going on, thank you.
It has been my experience that different browsers render colors in different ways. You have listed and compared two browser, Firefox and Safari. What about IE and Opera? My first website was a blue background and the difference between IE and Firefox has been significant. So I do not really know there is not something you can do about it. However, I would say that you are viewing in other browsers. Please remember that the majority of Internet users use IE. I am not a fan of IE, Firefox currently uses, but it is a fact. The question remains then, you have calibrated monitor and you see what you perceive as reality, which I do not doubt. But viewers of your work have also calibrated monitors? Probably not. In addition, LCDs tend to be more clear. What type of screen may be using your viewers? These are things you have no control over what is in fact the effect of colors that you try to nail. If you use the Internet as a way for customers to select and buy photographs, once printed, they may not be exactly as they did on the client computer. All for the reasons above, but also because, once printed, they look reflective colors without backlight of the screen.
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Getting Started with Camera Raw
$19.48 Not long ago the Raw format was limited to high-end digital SLR cameras–which meant you pretty much had to be a professional (or at least quite serious) photographer to take advantage of it. Not so today. Now that Raw is included on even the simplest point-and-shoot cameras, shutterbugs of all stripes can start taking advantage of its greater editing flexibility to produce better final images. This guide is the place to start. In these pages, veteran author Ben Long begins at the beginning, explaining exactly what Raw is and why photographers should use it. He then describes the theory, shooting, and image editing practices needed to work with Raw files. Ben also provides an overview of software used to convert raw files and a thorough explanation of how to use Photoshop Elements to edit Raw images. Some cool Camera Raw tricks, tips for shooting for Raw format, and a glossary of important terms round out the offering. |