Hi, now I am struggling against disabling Black Point Compensation when I view an image normaly (not with "Proof Colors").
In my understanding, we can turn off BPC with "Color Settings" daialog.
But in fact, RGB(0,0,0) image shows the lighter color as device-RGB (I checked it with a color picker application). That means BPC ON.
Does anyone know how to turn off BPC?
The folllowing is my environment:
OS: Windows 7
Ver.: Photoshop CS6
Conversion Options: ACE, Colorimetric
My goal is viewing an image in Photoshop as same as the other application, using
LUT based ICC profile as monitor profile. I think it needs disabling BPC.
For image display, BPC will remain on (as it should be).
If RGB)0,0,0) shows up as something other than 0,0,0 - that means that BPC is off, and the profile has a problem.
BPC maps black to black, to correct problems with profiles that don't always map the darkest color correctly.
BPC off really only applies for print conversions (some of which you can simulate in proof settings).
piedpiedpiedpiper wrote:
In my understanding, we can turn off BPC with "Color Settings" daialog.
Unchecking the BPC in the Color Settings dialog turns off BPC for mode changes and color transforms...it doesn't have anything to do with how Photoshop displays your image and you can't control how Ps displays the image on screen other than soft proofing aside for the creation of the display profile and the display calibration. Not sure what "color picker application" you are referring to but if your display is showing 0, 0, 0 RGB as being lighter than max display black, something is wrong with the display calibration and profile.
Edit, plus what Crhsi says :~)
Thanks a lot!
Chris Cox wrote:
For image display, BPC will remain on (as it should be).
Jeff Schewe wrote:
Unchecking the BPC in the Color Settings dialog turns off BPC for mode changes and color transforms...it doesn't have anything to do with how Photoshop displays your image
I have investigated Photoshop's behavior in some environment, and the one indicates we may disable BPC for image display.
On the above condition, the black patch RGB(0,0,0) shows device-RGB(5,3,2) in DigitalColor Meter In case of BPC ON in the Color Settings dialog.
And RGB(0,0,0) shows device-RGB(4,1,0) in case of BPC OFF. (Photoshop must be restarted to change the setting.)
These device-RGB values are the same as the ones in converted images by "Convert to Profile" dialog.
Therefore, I suppose the BPC check box in the Color Settings certainly affects the image display at least on the above condition, even if my monitor profile is wrong.
But the results in the other condition and your advice don't say so. I'm in confusion...
Please give me additonal suggestions and correct me if I am wrong.
Thanks in advance.
This monitor profile cannot be interpreted by Gretag-Macbeth Profilemaker.
Profile connection space is Lab. Normally one would use XYZ.
IMO there is no BPC for conversions between RGB working spaces and
monitor profiles. Working space black R=G=B=0 is mapped to monitor
values R=G=B=0 and appears with the darkest available monitor luminance.
Further discussions are here, including Adobe's BPC and Argyll comments:
Best regards --Gernot Hoffmann
Correction
Sorry, my mistake! I didn't check the box in front of the profile name
(which is normally not necessary, starting with one profile).
This gamut volume in Lab looks now quite normal.
Especially it reaches down to L*=0
Message was edited by: Gernot Hoffmann
Sorry for not writing so long.
Chris Cox wrote:
Also, check both tables for the profile - it doesn't always map to zero.
I have studied ICC standard and Adobe BPC document during the blank period:), but I couldn't understand the profile which doesn't map to zero is illegal.
In fact, many printer profiles don't map to zero.
So the Photoshop's behavior in my post #3 is still mystery.
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