- The color management system must know the color space of the image so it can decipher the meaning of the color values in the image. When assigning a profile to an image, the image will be in the color space described by the particular profile. A document's profile can be assigned by a source device, like a digital camera or a scanner, or assigned in Photoshop.
- Then, the color management system uses a color reference to identify the absolute colors represented by the color values in the image. Currently, color management systems use either CIE L*a*b* (Lab) or CIE XYZ for color reference. Both color spaces describe all the colors that a person can see; the color values referred to in this space are not limited to or tied to the colors produced by any device.
- And finally, the color management system must know the color space of the destination device so it can send properly translated RGB or CMYK color values to the device. The color management system uses profiles to understand what RGB and CMYK values mean to each device. Device profiles can be supplied by the manufacturer or created using third-party software and hardware.
Color management lets you produce consistent colors with a system that reconciles differences between the color spaces of each device.
For
the color management system to successfully convert color values
between the different color spaces so colors remain the same or very
similar, three things must happen:
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