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Re: The gamut of digital capture
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Re: The gamut of digital capture


  • Subject: Re: The gamut of digital capture
  • From: Karsten Krüger <email@hidden>
  • Date: Thu, 12 Jan 2006 08:50:29 +0100

What about so-called "sRGB printers", you know the ones that correspond to
an "output" sRGB profile? Is that any different? I allude to the fact that
there are many flavors of sRGB, like [sRGB-Input] and [sRGB- output]. It gets
confusing. Why not simply one sRGB profile, like the one shipping with all
Adobe apps dubbed [sRGB IEC61966-2.1] made by HP?

There is only one flavor of sRGB, the one you mentioned last. There are some
official variants like "Enhanced sRGB" = e-sRGB. But they have a different naming.


What you experienced is perhaps the quality of several products matching the
official sRGB standard, thus looking like different sRGBs but in reality being non
optimized software in those devices.


"sRGB printers" simply pretend to have a sRGB optimized input chanel. They
internally map all color information to what the engineers felt to be the real gamut.


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References: 
 >Re: The gamut of digital capture (From: Roger Breton <email@hidden>)

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