Ok, I just remembered that the RAW converter can open a file in ProPhoto RGB color space. Someone here once said that's the widest gamut that's practical for photographic use. So I'm going to save my conversions as ProPhoto. When I have to print, I'll probably convert to generic rgb. I don't have a ColorSynch profile for ProPhoto, and I haven't had much luck printing from color spaces other than generic rgb. I tried Adobe 98 RGB this morning, and the resulting print was less saturated than my Generic RGB print of the same file.
Paul
On Mar 5, 2005, at 8:22 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:


OK, that makes sense. But then, by the same token, wouldn't it make just
as much sense to scan using a profile with an even wider gamut?


Shel


[Original Message]
From: Paul Stenquist


If you scan in Adobe RGB and save your original, you'll have all that
information available. You won't lose anything by converting to sRGB.
Then, if you someday decide to output to a device that takes a wide
gamut, you'll have your original scan in wide gamut color space.





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