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malartem2019-01-23 18:14:36
Design
malartem, 2019-01-23 18:14:36

How should a designer work with color?

Hello!
I have a question about working with color in programs such as Photoshop, Illustrator, Figma and Scetch.
I used to design for myself and never thought that the resulting design project would be displayed differently on devices, as well as in different browsers.
I heard a lot about the sRGB color profile, that it is the most popular and practically works on all devices without color distortion. However, I do not understand how experienced designers deal with this problem. Is it really necessary to abandon the selected colors in favor of a narrow but working way of displaying color. Or perhaps there is a way that will work best for most newer devices and browser versions, because Dior can't afford an app that displays different colors. How do photographers work?

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3 answer(s)
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Neron, 2019-01-23
Lordov @Nekto_Habr

You will find all the answers in a brief materiel, I highly recommend taking a couple of hours and carefully smoking this material: CMS in the logic of digital coordinates.pdf

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opendannyy, 2019-01-24
@opendannyy

You won't believe it, but it so happened that all of us, designers and photographers, create web content (not mobile applications) using sRGB. And yes, so does Dior, and if not, then the harsh limitations of technology will still render their creations in sRGB.
PS: You probably haven't come across printing yet, have you?

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YUL Zvezdkin, 2019-01-25
@saost

sRGB is one of many standards. It may not work on all devices. Professionals ask the customer on what device he will view / display the layout and use colorimeters, spectrophotometers and other tricky devices. The human eye and brain are imperfect things. The pipette in Photoshop and Illustrator is our everything.
sRGB - for viewing illustrations on a monitor (web). For printing their own profiles, for video others.
And 99% of photographers do not know what color is at all: they have their own idea of ​​beauty.
In my opinion, it is enough to read Adobe's help about color profiles. There is enough information in the help to understand what it is. Well, if perfectionism does not let you sleep, then to Alexei Shadrin from the first post.

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