![]() ![]() Ok, you can now convert the color to neutral space, but obviously you still need to know the printers space. If you make the monitor display like sRGB then you then you see the colors as intended by the standard which is what web ought to be. We can then pair that magic number with this profile information to get device neutral values, or make the display conform to a standard color space like sRGB. ![]() Now you can make a profile for your monitor, which tells us how that particular monitor/work space combo looks like as every monitor on the globe is unique. In addition you need to know what the light conditions at the desktop is, so to be accurate you need to measure this monitor where it is used (or do it continuously). In essence you need to measure the monitor, with a colormeter (aka Montor calibrator like a ColorMunki for example). For all of this to make any sense you need to know what the color is in some device neutral space. So the numbers do not represent color as such they represent a color in one space, different RGB spaces will have different numeric values.*Įnter color management. Numbers are not important and without this information totally useless. ![]() So for example #dd0017 in sRGB colorspace makes sense. For it to make any sense to convert accurate color you muist specify the color space used. See the same number makes different colors in different colorspaces. To talk about same then you get into problems because we do not know if you mean: When you talk about pure color like #dd0017 you are specifying a color that is different on each and every monitor. With this off our agenda we can start to look what same would mean in your scenario. Saying that the color is #dd0017 is meaningless, unless it is paired with information about what color space you are using! Therefore also conversion from #dd0017 to CMYK is meaningless. ![]()
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