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How to ensure color fidelity of the same file on two computers?


Why should I calibrate my screen?How to reduce the file size of a Live Trace (high fidelity) imageHow to ensure the whole path has same widthHow to change the color of multiple objects of the same color all at once?How make two blended shapes the same color in PhotoshopConvert to BW by replacing colors with “shapes” (for printing)How can I set two shapes to the same color in GIMP?How do I get the color on my monitor to print that same colorShould designers use different color palettes between two separate apps under the same brand?Proofing for displays with low color fidelityConvert color to another color with exactly the same values?













2















What is the safest way to ensure that raster image exported from illustrator will be displayed correctly (in term of color fidelity) on another computer ?



I know that there will always be some inter-individual difference in term of color perception. However, I have experienced several difference between color perception of the same file on two computers. The differences were so important that some details were not visible..



Thank you in advance










share|improve this question







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Brice is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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    2















    What is the safest way to ensure that raster image exported from illustrator will be displayed correctly (in term of color fidelity) on another computer ?



    I know that there will always be some inter-individual difference in term of color perception. However, I have experienced several difference between color perception of the same file on two computers. The differences were so important that some details were not visible..



    Thank you in advance










    share|improve this question







    New contributor



    Brice is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.





















      2












      2








      2








      What is the safest way to ensure that raster image exported from illustrator will be displayed correctly (in term of color fidelity) on another computer ?



      I know that there will always be some inter-individual difference in term of color perception. However, I have experienced several difference between color perception of the same file on two computers. The differences were so important that some details were not visible..



      Thank you in advance










      share|improve this question







      New contributor



      Brice is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      What is the safest way to ensure that raster image exported from illustrator will be displayed correctly (in term of color fidelity) on another computer ?



      I know that there will always be some inter-individual difference in term of color perception. However, I have experienced several difference between color perception of the same file on two computers. The differences were so important that some details were not visible..



      Thank you in advance







      adobe-illustrator color raster






      share|improve this question







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      Brice is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.










      share|improve this question







      New contributor



      Brice is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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      share|improve this question




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      asked 8 hours ago









      BriceBrice

      132




      132




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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

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          4














          There isn't much you can do, unfortunately. The safest you can do is to make sure the image is in the sRGB color space when exported. The majority of people will be viewing it on monitors within that color gamut. Then just hope the people viewing your image don't have poorly calibrated monitors!



          If you know the target device it's a bit easier. A few of my clients use 4k Adobe RGB monitors for their trade show, so I always make sure I know the target device so I can account for this when proofing for other monitors.



          If they are viewing your image from the web, also keep in mind that even if they have a correctly calibrated monitor, some browsers are not color managed.



          To keep it simple, sRGB everything. :)






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.



















          • I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          • Anytime, good luck!

            – jkc133
            6 hours ago


















          4














          The answer is a color calibrated workflow.




          on another computer...




          Depends on how "random" that computer is. Let me explain.



          The only thing you can control is the computer you can control.



          1. Have a good enough monitor.


          2. Take one of these: https://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/ or https://www.colormunki.com/ There are several models to choose from.


          3. And configure your Illustrator correctly with the proper color profiles.



          1. If you can control the "other" computer, do the same.


          2. If the other computer is a random computer from your client, and you have no access to it, or there is no IT department that can calibrate it, you can not do anything.



          Take a look at this: Why should I calibrate my screen?




          One man is driving and listens on the radio:



          "A drunk man is on the highway driving on the opposite way!"



          And the man says, "One? there are a lot of them!"




          The only thing you can do is control your side of things.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          Your Answer








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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

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          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          4














          There isn't much you can do, unfortunately. The safest you can do is to make sure the image is in the sRGB color space when exported. The majority of people will be viewing it on monitors within that color gamut. Then just hope the people viewing your image don't have poorly calibrated monitors!



          If you know the target device it's a bit easier. A few of my clients use 4k Adobe RGB monitors for their trade show, so I always make sure I know the target device so I can account for this when proofing for other monitors.



          If they are viewing your image from the web, also keep in mind that even if they have a correctly calibrated monitor, some browsers are not color managed.



          To keep it simple, sRGB everything. :)






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.



















          • I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          • Anytime, good luck!

            – jkc133
            6 hours ago















          4














          There isn't much you can do, unfortunately. The safest you can do is to make sure the image is in the sRGB color space when exported. The majority of people will be viewing it on monitors within that color gamut. Then just hope the people viewing your image don't have poorly calibrated monitors!



          If you know the target device it's a bit easier. A few of my clients use 4k Adobe RGB monitors for their trade show, so I always make sure I know the target device so I can account for this when proofing for other monitors.



          If they are viewing your image from the web, also keep in mind that even if they have a correctly calibrated monitor, some browsers are not color managed.



          To keep it simple, sRGB everything. :)






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.



















          • I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          • Anytime, good luck!

            – jkc133
            6 hours ago













          4












          4








          4







          There isn't much you can do, unfortunately. The safest you can do is to make sure the image is in the sRGB color space when exported. The majority of people will be viewing it on monitors within that color gamut. Then just hope the people viewing your image don't have poorly calibrated monitors!



          If you know the target device it's a bit easier. A few of my clients use 4k Adobe RGB monitors for their trade show, so I always make sure I know the target device so I can account for this when proofing for other monitors.



          If they are viewing your image from the web, also keep in mind that even if they have a correctly calibrated monitor, some browsers are not color managed.



          To keep it simple, sRGB everything. :)






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          There isn't much you can do, unfortunately. The safest you can do is to make sure the image is in the sRGB color space when exported. The majority of people will be viewing it on monitors within that color gamut. Then just hope the people viewing your image don't have poorly calibrated monitors!



          If you know the target device it's a bit easier. A few of my clients use 4k Adobe RGB monitors for their trade show, so I always make sure I know the target device so I can account for this when proofing for other monitors.



          If they are viewing your image from the web, also keep in mind that even if they have a correctly calibrated monitor, some browsers are not color managed.



          To keep it simple, sRGB everything. :)







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.








          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.








          answered 7 hours ago









          jkc133jkc133

          664




          664




          New contributor



          jkc133 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.




          New contributor




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          Check out our Code of Conduct.














          • I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          • Anytime, good luck!

            – jkc133
            6 hours ago

















          • I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago











          • Anytime, good luck!

            – jkc133
            6 hours ago
















          I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

          – Brice
          7 hours ago





          I will check if my images are in sRGB, thank you for your answer !

          – Brice
          7 hours ago













          Anytime, good luck!

          – jkc133
          6 hours ago





          Anytime, good luck!

          – jkc133
          6 hours ago











          4














          The answer is a color calibrated workflow.




          on another computer...




          Depends on how "random" that computer is. Let me explain.



          The only thing you can control is the computer you can control.



          1. Have a good enough monitor.


          2. Take one of these: https://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/ or https://www.colormunki.com/ There are several models to choose from.


          3. And configure your Illustrator correctly with the proper color profiles.



          1. If you can control the "other" computer, do the same.


          2. If the other computer is a random computer from your client, and you have no access to it, or there is no IT department that can calibrate it, you can not do anything.



          Take a look at this: Why should I calibrate my screen?




          One man is driving and listens on the radio:



          "A drunk man is on the highway driving on the opposite way!"



          And the man says, "One? there are a lot of them!"




          The only thing you can do is control your side of things.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago















          4














          The answer is a color calibrated workflow.




          on another computer...




          Depends on how "random" that computer is. Let me explain.



          The only thing you can control is the computer you can control.



          1. Have a good enough monitor.


          2. Take one of these: https://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/ or https://www.colormunki.com/ There are several models to choose from.


          3. And configure your Illustrator correctly with the proper color profiles.



          1. If you can control the "other" computer, do the same.


          2. If the other computer is a random computer from your client, and you have no access to it, or there is no IT department that can calibrate it, you can not do anything.



          Take a look at this: Why should I calibrate my screen?




          One man is driving and listens on the radio:



          "A drunk man is on the highway driving on the opposite way!"



          And the man says, "One? there are a lot of them!"




          The only thing you can do is control your side of things.






          share|improve this answer























          • Thank you very much for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago













          4












          4








          4







          The answer is a color calibrated workflow.




          on another computer...




          Depends on how "random" that computer is. Let me explain.



          The only thing you can control is the computer you can control.



          1. Have a good enough monitor.


          2. Take one of these: https://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/ or https://www.colormunki.com/ There are several models to choose from.


          3. And configure your Illustrator correctly with the proper color profiles.



          1. If you can control the "other" computer, do the same.


          2. If the other computer is a random computer from your client, and you have no access to it, or there is no IT department that can calibrate it, you can not do anything.



          Take a look at this: Why should I calibrate my screen?




          One man is driving and listens on the radio:



          "A drunk man is on the highway driving on the opposite way!"



          And the man says, "One? there are a lot of them!"




          The only thing you can do is control your side of things.






          share|improve this answer













          The answer is a color calibrated workflow.




          on another computer...




          Depends on how "random" that computer is. Let me explain.



          The only thing you can control is the computer you can control.



          1. Have a good enough monitor.


          2. Take one of these: https://www.datacolor.com/photography-design/ or https://www.colormunki.com/ There are several models to choose from.


          3. And configure your Illustrator correctly with the proper color profiles.



          1. If you can control the "other" computer, do the same.


          2. If the other computer is a random computer from your client, and you have no access to it, or there is no IT department that can calibrate it, you can not do anything.



          Take a look at this: Why should I calibrate my screen?




          One man is driving and listens on the radio:



          "A drunk man is on the highway driving on the opposite way!"



          And the man says, "One? there are a lot of them!"




          The only thing you can do is control your side of things.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered 7 hours ago









          RafaelRafael

          23.9k12357




          23.9k12357












          • Thank you very much for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago

















          • Thank you very much for your answer !

            – Brice
            7 hours ago
















          Thank you very much for your answer !

          – Brice
          7 hours ago





          Thank you very much for your answer !

          – Brice
          7 hours ago










          Brice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









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          Brice is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














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