So, it appeared correctly (yellow) in your browser and then purple (not colour managed) after you saved it, Marc? What browser were you using? Sounds like it stripped the profile when it downloaded the file.
So, it appeared correctly (yellow) in your browser and then purple (not colour managed) after you saved it, Marc? What browser were you using? Sounds like it stripped the profile when it downloaded the file.
Cheers,
Rick.
I was viewing in IE11.0.20. When I saved the file I saved two version. Funny thing is when I load the purple car in PS and the orange one in a separate file the histogram is similar. When I copy paste the orange car in a new layer in the purple file then the orange turns gray scale and looses the color.
Yellow in Chrome, FF, PS, windows pic viewer and some other viewers.
But purple in MS Paint (and thanks for getting me to open Paint for the first time this millennium...)
same here .... yellow in Firefox.
.... purple in MS Paint.
interesting...!! ... how so....?
Col.....
The image has RGB values that would normally be interpreted as a purple colour in any typical colour space. A couple of samples are <R=103,G=0,B=177> and <R=165,G=0,B=235>. If you display these values directly on almost any screen you'll get a purple colour.
The image also has an embedded colour profile called "Jeffrey's Funky RGB." This instructs the colour management system, if one is being used, to map these values to a yellow colour before displaying them.
So, if the image is displayed without colour management the car is purple. If colour management is active then the car will be yellow.
Hmmm... never checked it in other browsers. Let's see:
Chrome: yellow
IE: would not open the page (who cares... who uses IE????!!!!!!!!!)
Firefox: yellow
Maxthon: yellow
PS: yellow with management on, purple if turned off.
Paint: purple (I too had NEVER opened paint since installing Win 7...)
PixInsite: purple
MaxIM: Purple
The image has RGB values that would normally be interpreted as a purple colour in any typical colour space. A couple of samples are <R=103,G=0,B=177> and <R=165,G=0,B=235>. If you display these values directly on almost any screen you'll get a purple colour.
The image also has an embedded colour profile called "Jeffrey's Funky RGB." This instructs the colour management system, if one is being used, to map these values to a yellow colour before displaying them.
So, if the image is displayed without colour management the car is purple. If colour management is active then the car will be yellow.