Your guide to color management for print and digital photos

Like it or not, today we tend to keep family photographs and cherished memories only in digital format.

Most of the images we see on a day-to-day basis are on a screen of some kind.

I’m convinced that the future of our photography will be digital distribution and display of imagery in a form of wall-mounted monitors with rotating landscape images or family portraits hanging in our living rooms, or galleries on our cell phones or whatever device comes next, or the like.

The advantages of electronic images in terms of color, flexibility, accessibility, are just too overwhelming. As a result fewer and fewer people are likely willing to display an actual physical fine art print on their walls.

Yes, digital photo storage is a good idea. However, technology is ever-changing and leaves us with a feeling like we need backups of our backups. There are various formats for digital photographs and videos and those formats need software to correctly render those objects.

Sometimes the standards they use to produce those objects fade away and are replaced by other alternatives and then software that is supposed to render images can’t render older formats, hard drives fail or images are accidentally deleted. As a result the images are no longer visible and we lose a part of family history.

I absolutely believe there are people passionate about actual physical prints like I am. Printing is part of our industry and as photographers we should embrace it. And our challenge in this new world is to educate our audience on what a print can be and to make those prints as amazing as possible.

A printed photograph is emotive and personal. A printed photograph is archival, and there’s something beautiful about a photograph being archival. It means that it’s going to be here for the next generation to enjoy, and that’s important, because I know that this image isn’t going to fade in one, two, three years’ time.

Printing makes me a better photographer. A printed photograph completes my vision as an artist. Everything from how I process an image, how large I print it, and what paper I use for that particular print is guided by my artistic intent.

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you’ve never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

And, perhaps you have been printing already but haven’t been getting quite the results that you’d hoped you’d be getting.

And it’s very easy, sometimes, to blame an album manufacturer or a lab, and saying “their printing is not that good!” Well, maybe there’s a little bit more to the story, maybe we need to do something at our end to fix things.

What is color?

Our eyes can distinguish more than 10 million colors. What we see as a color is actually our eyes picking up a part of the spectrum of light. Light that appears white to us such as light from the sun is actually composed of many colors.

The primary color system that photographers deal with when shooting and manipulating digitally is known as additive colors. When the red, green and blue phosphors of a pixel are illuminated simultaneously, that pixel becomes white (additive color system).

The colors that make up subtractive system are cyan, magenta, yellow and key (black) (CMYK). This system is used for printing our images.

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

What is color management?

Digital photography was supposed to be simple. We take a photo, upload it to our computer, share it with friends online and then print it.

The problem with most devices is screen quality. Not every electronic device has the same quality screen for displaying photos.

We have to understand that each device, online service, web browser and printer handles color differently. The color gamut describes the variety of colors that can be used by a specific device, also can be referred to as a color space.

But the good news is they understand color through the use of what is known as a color profile. This color profile basically tells the device how it should convert a color to a digital signal.

What we capture on our camera has to be translated electronically to a monitor and then the monitor has to translate that information again to a print. Color management brings all our devices together with a consistent color profile and hence color space. The color space defines exactly how many colors the device can reproduce (gamut).

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

Color management and my camera.

Personally I would like to have the best final image quality for printing which is why Adobe RGB is my choice. However, if you shoot RAW, you do not need to worry about the color space in camera as it can be set in the post production (use your camera manual to set the color space).

The only sure way to correct for this type of error is careful setting of the white balance for each scene.

Color management and my monitor.

The next link in the chain is the computer and its software.

If you want to be certain of what you’ve actually captured on your camera you need to view it on a well-calibrated and properly profiled monitor. Unfortunately, most monitors do not come calibrated and require regular monthly calibration.

This is performed with the use of colorimeter or spectrophotometer, these devices sit over the screen of your monitor and measure the value of certain colors when they are displayed. By the end of the calibration process, a custom color profile is created for your particular monitor and ambient lighting situation, as a result your colors are displayed accurately.

My monitor is calibrated with a hardware calibration system Spyder 5 Pro, but there are numerous options available.

Learn how to calibrate your monitor here.

Setting up color management in your software can be tiresome but it’s important for the color management process. I personally work in ProPhoto RGB, as it’s created specifically to be larger than a color gamut. Which means that if I convert a raw file into ProPhoto RGB there would be no loss of color.

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.
Lightroom

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.
Photoshop

Choosing the right paper for images.

Printing is as much a part of the creative process as deciding when to click the shutter on your camera. With a huge selection of manufacturer-branded and third-party inkjet papers, it’s easy to get lost when trying to decide what paper to choose.

Choosing the right paper is a personal preference and you need to experiment to see what look and feel is right for you and your vision as an artist. Mostly it depends on the mood you are trying to convey and emotional content of each particular image.

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

Various paper textures can either complement or get in the way of your image.

In general, semi glossy and glossy surfaces enhance images that rely upon rich contrast and color saturation. Matte surfaces enhance pastels.

But don’t limit your choice to one or two papers. It’s a good idea to have several options on hand so you can select the perfect output for each image you create. Purchasing sample packs from various manufacturers is good for that.

Color management and printer-paper color profiles (soft proofing).

“In color management, an ICC profile is a set of data that characterizes a color input or output device, or color space, according to standards promulgated by the International Color Consortium.”

— from Wikipedia.

This is an essential part of the overall color management process.

During the soft proofing process Photoshop will try to simulate the application of a particular ICC profile on your image, using your monitor to judge the results. The idea is to avoid wasting paper and ink by applying corrections to the image prior to output. An ICC profile helps accomplish just that.

Most of the photo labs have a range of ICC profiles to download on their websites for different types of paper. Follow your lab’s instructions to install and use the soft proof profiles.

For best results, submit a test print order containing a range of images which cover a wide spectrum of colors, a so-called printer evaluation chart. You can find those available for download on internet.

These test images can help with any density adjustments you may need to make and detect problems ahead of time by including highly saturated, hard to render colors, various skin tones, gray ramps to test for banding or color casts, smooth color gradations and tonal transitions, and deep shadow details.

photo 10 on soft proofing

The workflow described below will help you to print your first photograph through a printing lab, if you've never printed before, and can guarantee you will be pleased with the results.

In my Breakout “Bringing your vision to life: Emotive portraits from shoot to print” I walk you through the process of how I choose the paper for my photographs and handle the whole process of printing through a custom printer or an online printing services.

There’s something so powerful about holding your memories in your hand, being able to touch a part of your history, and knowing these are the stories you’ll pass down for generations.

A print provides a home for your photo where it can be loved and have its story told. And if you don’t record the memory behind the photo, that photo loses half its value.

Clickin Moms online photography forum

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Nikon 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6E VR AF-P Review

Nikon 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6E ED VR AF-P

In this in-depth review of the Nikon AF-P NIKKOR 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6E ED VR lens, we will take a close look at what this full-frame lens has to offer when used on modern Nikon DSLR cameras, go over its features and compare it to its predecessor. The Nikon 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6E VR AF-P was announced in July of 2017 as a major update to the existing 70-300mm lens design, optimized for high-resolution camera bodies, and armed with the latest optical technologies. Sporting a pulse stepping motor to deliver ultra-fast and completely silent autofocus operation, along with an electronic diaphragm, it is quite a bit different compared to the Nikon 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6G VR it replaced. And while it might resemble its DX counterpart, it arguably has little in common (aside from the stepping motor), as we will reveal further down in the review.

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Photographing the Long-Necked Padaung Ladies

Long-Necked Padaung Ladies (5)

Two ethical issues might obstruct your visit to Kayah State in Myanmar to visit the “long-necked ladies” of the Padaung Tribe. First, you might not wish to visit a country whose army is committing genocide against its Rohingya minority, never mind that you are at the far end of the country from that sadness. But, your tourist dollars are supporting the guides, restaurant owners and their staff, and all the other people who rely on them for their livelihood. And, your absence isn’t making much of a difference to the army.

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Automation is Coming – How Will it Affect the Developing World?

sharpner

Automation? Developing world? This is supposed to be a photography blog, not The Economist! I know. I know. Have patience, dear reader, and it will come together soon. And I promise there will be photos. Let me explain: I have a fascination with photographing Pakistan’s working class. I was born and raised there and have a tremendous amount of respect for the resilience, work ethic and ingenuity of the common people. Whenever I visit, I try to capture elements of that spirit through photography. Some readers may have seen some of my earlier work from there on this site. Here’s the twist: my day job is in tech – one could call my work Silicon Valley-ish – and the big buzzword these days is ‘automation’. The robots are coming and soon we all be out of work. Well, that last bit may just be hyperbole but in reality, no one really seems to know how it will play out. And developing countries may be hardest hit. That’s exactly what was on my mind on my photo walks during a recent trip back home. Keep in mind that in Pakistan, much like the rest of the developing world, manual work is the engine that powers the economy.

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Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM Review

Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM

Introduced in 1999, the Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM has long been regarded as a benchmark in Canon’s lineup in terms of image sharpness and focusing performance. At the time of its introduction, the EF 300mm f/2.8L IS replaced the very successful EF 300mm f/2.8L USM which was one of Canons best lenses. With this update, Canon gave the EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM a wholly new optical formula with one fluorite element and two UD-glass elements along with image stabilization. These additions allowed the lens to reach incredible levels of sharpness at even at wide open apertures while the stabilization greatly increased the potential for using the lens effectively while handheld. The lens was finally retired in 2011 with the introduction of the Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L IS USM II but remains a wonderful lens that gives up little to its newer brother in overall performance. I personally obtained a copy of the lens four years ago and it has been my companion on multiple trips across the world over that time. At first, I paired the lens with the Canon 1D III camera body and later a Canon 1Dx with both cameras being used in this review.

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