User Guide

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ADOBE GOLIVE CS2
User Guide
You can select a rendering intent when you set color conversion options for the color management system, soft-proof
colors, and print artwork:
Perceptual Aims to preserve the visual relationship between colors so its perceived as natural to the human eye,
even though the color values themselves may change. This intent is suitable for photographic images with lots of out-
of-gamut colors. This is the standard rendering intent for the Japanese printing industry.
Saturation Tries to produce vivid colors in an image at the expense of color accuracy. This rendering intent is
suitable for business graphics like graphs or charts, where bright saturated colors are more important than the exact
relationship between colors.
Relative Colorimetric Compares the extreme highlight of the source color space to that of the destination color
space and shifts all colors accordingly. Out-of-gamut colors are shifted to the closest reproducible color in the desti-
nation color space. Relative colorimetric preserves more of the original colors in an image than Perceptual. This is
the standard rendering intent for printing in North America and Europe
Absolute Colorimetric Leaves colors that fall inside the destination gamut unchanged. Out of gamut colors are
clipped. No scaling of colors to destination white point is performed. This intent aims to maintain color accuracy at
the expense of preserving relationships between colors and is suitable for proofing to simulate the output of a
particular device. This intent is particularly useful for previewing how paper color affects printed colors.
Advanced controls
In Photoshop you display advanced controls for managing color by choosing Edit > Color Settings and selecting
More Options.
Desaturate Monitor Colors By Determines whether to desaturate colors by the specified amount when displayed
on the monitor. When selected, this option can aid in visualizing the full range of color spaces with gamuts larger
than that of the monitor. However, this causes a mismatch between the monitor display and the output. When the
option is deselected, distinct colors in the image may display as a single color.
Blend RGB Colors Using Gamma Controls how RGB colors blend together to produce composite data (for example,
when you blend or paint layers using Normal mode). When the option is selected, RGB colors are blended in the
color space corresponding to the specified gamma. A gamma of 1.00 is considered “colorimetrically correct” and
should result in the fewest edge artifacts. When the option is deselected, RGB colors are blended directly in the
document’s color space.
Note: When you select Blend RGB Colors Using Gamma, layered documents will look different when displayed in other
applications than they do in Photoshop.