Re: Disabling colour management for a display
Re: Disabling colour management for a display
- Subject: Re: Disabling colour management for a display
- From: SQ <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 04 Jan 2013 18:52:47 +0000
Sent from a touch-screen device
On 4 Jan 2013, at 16:48, C D Tobie <email@hidden> wrote:
>
> On Jan 3, 2013, at 11:56 PM, email@hidden wrote:
>
>> So, first question: am I right in assuming that a display profile is
>> always applied? OS X seems to assign a generic profile no matter what I
>> do, but maybe it simply acts as a passthrough?
>
> Adjustments from the actual ICC profile are applied by applications which choose to do so, but not globally.
Aha, I think I understand my mistake now. When I select a colour profile for my display (say, a Cinema Display) it simply acts as a reference for colour-managed applications. That is, an application (eg. Pixelmator) can refer to my colour profile settings for a given display and if there's a profile assigned it'll modify its rendering accordingly. I think what was confusing me was that the Finder and the UI are colour-managed, and when I saw the desktop picture, menu bar and other UI elements changing with selection of a colour profile it's because the underlying software was altering its rendering, not because the OS was modifying ALL output to the display. Am I right?
>> Second question: if I'm right and OS X always assigns a modifying display
>> profile to any given display, is there any way of disabling it, even
>> temporarily?
>
> I believe you may be confusing Video Look Up Table data flashed to the video card (which can be stored in a special tag in an ICC profile, and can be applied with the profile, as the Mac OS will do, if you choose a profile that has LUT data included) with the profile itself. What you need to do is be sure you are using a display profile with no LUT data, so that the data won't be adjusted at the video card level by the LUTs on its way through. But this only applies to data running through a video card, as it does to a computer display. Selecting a generic profile such as sRGB will assure that there is no LUT data being applied at the video card.
Aha, I get this too. So, wouldn't I be best choosing HD 709-A for the HDTV, as this is what I'm attempting to calibrate the screen to? Or am I simply entirely wrong in thinking that any video playback software (eg. DVD Player, QuickTime) in OS X is ICC-profile aware? In which case, as you say, so long as the graphic card's LUT is untouched I've got nothing to worry about in the first place?
>
> C. David Tobie
> Global Product Technology Manager
>
> <image003.gif>
>
> Datacolor
> 5 Princess Road
> Lawrenceville, NJ 08648, USA
> 609.924.2189
> www.datacolor.com
>
> Phone: 207.685.9248
> Mobile: 207.312.0448
> Fax: 207.685.4455
> Email: email@hidden
> Skype: cdtobie
>
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