Color me bad

This is a scrape from http://www.viget.com, it’s a great informative approach and discussion to saving your photoshop files to web. This is something that I have battled with on my own, and though not the perfect formula it accounts for the problem that many designers may have and yet to find a solution for. The original post can be found here.

Warning, the following information is hotly contested.

While working on the Odeo relaunch, we kept running into a frustrating problem: When we saved out the slices, the awesome Odeo pink flattened to a dreary “light coral”. I’d seen the problem before, but never so pronounced: The color, through no fault of its own, was obviously changing, and we were at a loss for a way to prevent this.

Odeo Logo

Fig. 1 : Dastardly!

The usual suspects get knocked out pretty quickly in this issue: It isn’t a Mac/PC thing, it isn’t a monitor thing, it isn’t because the color profile is somehow set “wrong”. Fellow designers: Somewhere between PSD and JPG, Photoshop is draining our colors of their life, like some horrible, RGB-stealing vampire.

There’s a lot of confusion on the web over why this is, and a lot of solutions being offered. Everything I found fails the acid test, though:

Testing for Perfect Color Translation

If I “Save For Web” an image from Photoshop, open that image up in a browser side-by-side with the original, I should see identical colors. I can then take a screenshot, open the screenshot in Photoshop, and test the color accuracy with our friend the color eyedropper, to show that nothing has shifted even slightly from the original image.

Color Testing

Fig. 2 : Checking for color shifts.

I’ve attached a JPG with some more indepth instructions at the end of the post. The testing process is a little painful, but the end result is worth it:

The ability to see, perfectly, how the colors in Photoshop are going to appear in your browser.

A Warning

What we’re doing here won’t make your colors look the same on all monitors or machines. Macs will display lighter (by default, at least), and monitors themselves will experience crazy color shifts based on age and settings. Reassure yourself: This is not your fault. The key is to calibrate your monitor as close to the center as possible, use Proof Colors (we’ll get to that) to make sure details aren’t getting blown out on other platforms, and be prepared to gently explain to clients why your green looks like aqua on their friend’s 1992 Trinitron.

Okay, here we go: Three Steps to Color Perfection.

Step 1: Color Profiles

Color profiles define how Photoshop interprets the raw color data in your files. That’s right: That means they change how you see the colors. This kind of precision is great for photography and print design, but it’s got to go if we’re making a website. With no images open, go to Edit / Color Settings.

Color Settings

Fig. 3 : Changing to Monitor Color.

We’re going to essentially turn off all this profile nonsense by changing the top drop-down to Monitor Color. Let’s uncheck “Ask When Opening” while we’re at it….from now on, when you open an image that has a color profile, Photoshop will give you a brief heads-up that we’re tossing it out.

Step 2: Proof Setup

Now, let’s go up to View / Proof Setup / Monitor RGB. This is to make sure Photoshop won’t be showing you skewed colors on your nice new profile-less images. A note, though: If you’re on a Mac/PC and want to see how an image is going to look on the other’s default gamma setting, you can come back here and test using “Windows RGB” or “Macintosh RGB.” Just remember to switch it back, or you could accidentally be designing in (shudder) PC mode.

Proof Settings

Fig. 4 : Make sure you’re not viewing the wrong proof colors.

Step 3:

After all this hard work, Photoshop still wants to sneak color profiles into your images. Most web browsers ignore them, but new Safari and Firefox builds DON’T, and IE can be set to work with them too. This can result in the weirdest cross-browser headache yet, so we need to make sure the colors we save out are sans profile.

Convert to sRGB

Fig. 5 : Convert to sRGB is an evil setting.

Thankfully, it’s an easy fix: Open up any image on your machine and File / Save For Web. Next to the Preset option, there’s a sneaky little arrow…click it and uncheck “Convert to sRGB.” (Note: From what I can tell, this is only the default setting in CS3)

Congratulations

Your color woes are over! Or maybe not. If you followed these steps and your color accuracy test failed, leave a comment and we can try to figure this thing out using the awesome power of teamwork.

Continue reading

Lightroom 2 - Yay!

Well, Lightroom 2 is here. And yes, I’ll be upgrading very soon.

But the upgrade pricing has, again, raised a sore point with me in regard to Adobe’s pricing policies. The upgrade costs $99 in the States and 99€ in Europe (both prices will be adjusted with tax). With the current currency levels this means that the comparable prices are 63€ and 99€. That’s a 36€ difference (about $100).

I can accept the fact that companies need to add some markup to international prices to account for currency fluctuations and other assorted costs. When the markup is around a third of the price I start to lose my understanding and become annoyed.

I’ve aleady found multiple threads online on ordering other Adobe products boxed from the States in order to avoid the insane markups and I will certainly be looking into ordering Lightroom from the States.

Don’t get me wrong, while I am a strong proponent of open-source, I am willing to pay for a good piece of software (latest purchases include E and TextMate). But there is a limit to what I’m willing to suffer.

So now I’ll just wait for the boxed products to start shipping and upgrade then, if shipping and handling costs remain reasonable that is.

P.S. The Photoshop CS3 30-day trial that I installed on Anna’s Mac still reports 30 days of the trial period left (after two weeks of installation). But yes, I’ll still be ordering a licensed version as soon as some client billing comes through.

Continue reading

Manchester United vs Bolton

Ronaldo won and converted a disputed penalty on 60 minutes to score his first league goal of the season, before Rooney arrived from the substitutes’ bench to seal victory with an exquisite finish late on.
The result represented only United’s second win in five Premier League matches, and the first time Sir Alex Ferguson’s team have scored more than once in the top flight this season.
The opening exchanges belonged to Bolton, however, who took no time in asserting their trademark physicality on United’s comparatively lightweight midfield.
Two minutes in the visitors had the first shot on target, when Kevin Nolan reacted first to a loose ball and struck a firm volley into the arms of Edwin van der Sar.
Kevin Davies was the next to threaten, driving in from the left and sending over a far-post cross which Rio Ferdinand dealt with comfortably.
But United escaped the early volleys unscathed and gradually started to settle in possession.
On 13 minutes, Dimitar Berbatov met Darren Fletcher’s right-wing cross with a crisp header, but could only direct it straight at Jussi Jaaskelainen in the Bolton goal.
Two minutes later Carlos Tevez cut in from the left and fired a low shot that Jaaskelainen parried into the path of Park Ji-Sung. The South Korean found the angle too tight, however, and could only find the side netting.
Just after the half-hour mark Jaaskelainen made a fine save to deny Anderson, and soon after repeated the feat to punch away a powerful Ferdinand effort.
Bolton were being outplayed and bookings for Johan Elmander, Davies and Gavin McCann owed much to their inability to cope with United’s attacking threat.
Just before the interval, however, Gary Megson’s men launched a counter-attack and missed a glorious opportunity to take an undeserved lead.
Gretar Steinsson was the architect, reaching the by-line on the right and finding Fabrica Muamba with a fine cross - only for the midfielder to shoot wide from six yards with Van der Sar sprawling.
The second half began with United firmly in the ascendancy. Ronaldo cut across the Bolton box from the left to shoot against the post on 52 minutes, and the visitors duly parked all of their resources behind the ball.
The Portuguese winger moved to the opposite flank soon after and won his side a penalty from referee Rob Styles after Jloyd Samuel was harshly adjudged to have brought him down.
Replays showed the defender got the ball, and Ronaldo compounded Bolton’s frustration by sending Jaaskelainen the wrong way and putting United ahead with a flourish.
In truth it was no more than the home side deserved, and they doubled their lead on 77 minutes with a fine finish from substitute Rooney.
Ronaldo was inevitably involved, driving into the Bolton box before finding the England striker with an impudent backheel. Rooney dragged the ball back and sent a curling shot beyond Jaaskelainen into the far corner.
There would be no response from Gary Megson’s toothless Bolton, who other than the occasional foray were hopelessly bereft of ambition and ultimately could have suffered a far heavier defeat but for the efforts of Jaaskelainen.
Substitute Paul Scholes was sent clean through by Berbatov on 88 minutes, but the impressive Jaaskelainen once more came to the visitor’s rescue - saving with his legs.
United played out the closing minutes comfortably, and Ferguson could even afford the luxury of withdrawing the ever-influential Ronaldo once his important work was done.
With both he and Rooney on the scoresheet there was a familiar look to this United victory - one that will surely send a clear message to those who dared to doubt United’s title credentials.
Will Tidey / Eurosport

Continue reading

Worldwide Photo Walk, Prescott - It’s Official!

Well gang, it’s official! Prescott has been slated as one of the cities on Scott Kelby’s Worldwide Photo Walk!

Hey, we’re on the map! Literally, I had to go to Google Maps to set up the map for the sign up sheet.

So, if you’d like to sign up and be official you need to go to the following link:

http://www.photoshopuser.com/photowalk/city/prescott.html

Once you’re on the page you’ll see a red sign up button in the upper right section of the page. The button says, “Photo walk sign up.” You’ll then have to type in your e-mail address, your name, and make sure you select Prescott from the pull down list at the top of the form. Don’t want you signing up for Miami accidentally (unless you want to go to Miami).

I’ve tentatively set the time for 8:30 a.m. I know, it’s early, but you know it gets warm here, and the downtown gets pretty busy on a Saturday. Oh, and to remind you, August 23rd! We’ll start at Sharlot Hall Museum, and we’ll finish out at The Raven Cafe.

I should probably talk to the folks at the Raven about a group of people with cameras showing up. Sure, they’ve hosted “Blog Fests” before, but I bet they want a little notice! :)

This should be a lot of fun. Be sure to sign up soon, as space is limited to 50 sign ups in each city. I already know more than 10 people signing up, and we’ve had a few new folks already pop up on the site (yup, sign ups have started before I even posted this).

I think I’ll go walk the route today, just for ideas…… :)


[Slashdot][Digg][Reddit][del.icio.us][Technorati][Google][StumbleUpon]

Continue reading

Totoro no Furusato - Sept. 6th @ Pixar in Emeryville, CA

The world’s top film animators, comic book artists and illustrators have come together to create original works of art inspired by the iconic animated film MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO for an auction to benefit the Totoro No Furusato (Totoro’s Homeland) National Fund - also known as the Totoro Forest Fund.

The organization is dedicated to preserving Sayama Forest, a large park outside Tokyo that inspired the beloved film by respected Japanese movie director Hayao Miyazaki. The Totoro Forest Project Charity Auction (http://totoroforestproject.org/) will be held Saturday, September 6, at Pixar Animation Studios in Emeryville, California.

The Sayama Forest, which inspired the landscape of 1988’s MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO, occupies nearly 15 square miles of cultivated forest, rice paddy fields, wetlands and grassland amidst an encroaching sea of urban development. The area has been the subject of preservation efforts since the 1970s, but because land is at such a premium in the Tokyo area, it is under constant threat of development. The Totoro No Furusato National Fund was established in 1990 following the success of MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO and the attention the film drew to the Sayama Forest.

“Professor Tashihiko Ando, chairman of the Totoro No Furusato National Fund, has stated that Hayao Miyazaki has described MY NEIGHBOR TOTORO as a movie that portrayed a paradise for children,” said Dice Tsutsumi, art director at Pixar Animation Studios and one of the organizers of the Totoro Forest Project Charity Auction. “The Sayama Forest is the embodiment of that paradise. The auction is a wonderful opportunity for artists to help preserve this historic forest for future generations of children, and pay tribute to Miyazaki-san and the film that has been so inspirational to their art.”

More than 200 artists from around the world have created nearly 210 original paintings, illustrations and sculptures for the Totoro Forest Project Charity Auction. A high quality book featuring all the works of art will be available for purchase at the event. Additionally, a selection of the artwork will be featured in a special exhibition September 20, 2008 to February 8, 2009 at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco.

Pixar artists Dice Tsutsumi, Enrico Casarosa and Ronnie Del Carmen, and Yukino Pang of the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, lead the Totoro Forest Project Charity Auction organizing committee.

For more information about the Totoro No Furusato National Fund and the Totoro Forest Project Charity Auction, visit http://totoroforestproject.org/ or email totoroart@gmail.com.

Help us grow! Share this post on your favorite social site:

Diggdel.icio.usFacebookStumbleUponTwitThisMixxGoogle

yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = “Totoro no Furusato - Sept. 6th @ Pixar in Emeryville, CA”;

http://japancast.net/index.php/2008/08/25/totoro-no-furusato-sept-6th-pixar-in-emeryville-ca/

Continue reading

Photo Share Podcast #21: Flowers, Prizes and The LOC

Dandlilions and DaisiesWe’re baaaaaack! Hard to believe that we’re 21 episodes into this thing . . . did you know that most podcasts are discontinued after just 4 or 5 episodes?

On to the show . . . our photo of the week comes from Basher’s Batey, and we’d like to thank her very much for contributing her work to the group.

from the locOur interview this week, part one of two, is with Helena Zinkham from the Library of Congress. She is one of the team that’s working on the LOC Flickr project. You might have noticed their profile and the photos they’ve uploaded so far. Right now they’re uploading 50 photos a week from the Bain News Service collection, but they’ve already uploaded over 3600 photos. The idea is to make this photos available for people to tag and contribute comments that further contextualize the photos. Stay tuned for the second part next week.

Our question of the week was inspired by some of our interviews. “People often experience life changes which may or may not effect their photography. With or without details, would you like to share how your photography has been effected by these changes?” You can answer the question at the PSP Flickr Group.

While I have you here, I’d like to point you to a new resource on the Web that interacts with Flickr: PhotoShop Express. It’s a Web based tool that allows you to edit and store your photos, plus upload them back to Flickr. Oh, and it’s free.

Speaking of free, we’re having a contest. The purpose of the contest is to promote the podcast - total self interest, I know - but there is some over all benefit: the more popular we become, the better interviews we can get. In that light, I’m giving away 3 domain names that I own. How can you participate in the contest?

You need to promote the podcast on the Web or any other method you can, asking people to come to the Photo Share Podcast and subscribe to the feed. That means you can talk the podcast up on your blog, in your photo stream, on your Flickr profile . . . or any other idea I haven’t thought of. Using our stats package I can tell exactly where our traffic is coming from, so it’ll be pretty easy for me to determine the winner. If you’re doing something interesting you think might not be reflected in our stats, let me know.

To get them you need to either have a Godaddy account or start one (they’re free too). When we announce the winners on the June 16th podcast the first people to contact me will get first choice of the domain name they want. Here are the domains I’ll be giving away:

  • http://www.thebestpodcasts.com
  • http://www.theslowshow.com
  • http://www.whomadewho.org

Just to let you know, next month I’ll probably be having another contest.

Thanks for listening; we’ll talk to you next week!

ShareThis

Tags: bain news service, flickr, interview, library of congress, photo of the week, photo share, PhotoShop, Podcast, question of the week, Show Notes

Continue reading

Inside Plugins: NextGEN FlashViewer in italiano

gidibao's Cafe | Inside PluginsWordPress offre un ampio numero di plugin grazie ai quali é possibile integrare al codice di base della piattaforma alcune nuove opzioni potenzialmente utili per estendere ed ottimizzare al meglio le funzionalità del proprio weblog.
Inside Plugins nasce come rubrica informativa e di segnalazione con il chiaro intento di fornire un supporto di base ai blogger che affidano a WordPress le loro pubblicazioni online: NextGEN FlashViewer Plugin by Boris Glumpler.

NextGEN FlashViewer é una addon che permette la completa integrazione* dei noti Adobe Flash Plugins (SimpleViewer, TiltViewer, AutoViewer e PostcardViewer) sviluppati dalla AirtightInteractive con il plugin NextGEN Gallery realizzato per WordPress da Alex Rabe.

Installazione

Installazione:

  1. Scaricare e decomprimere il file zip del plugin
  2. Scaricare e decomprimere gli Adobe Flash Plugins: SimpleViewer, TiltViewer, AutoViewer e PostcardViewer
  3. inserire i file viewer.swf (SimpleViewer), tiltviewer.swf (TiltViewer) ed autoviewer.swf (AutoViewer) nella sotto-cartella flash di NextGEN FlashViewer
  4. rinominare il file viewer.swf (PostcardViewer) in pcviewer.swf per ovviare alla omonimia con quello utilizzato dal SimpleViewer
  5. inserire i file pcviewer.swf nella sotto-cartella flash di NextGEN FlashViewer
  6. Upload della cartella ‘nextgen-flashviewer’ in wp-content/plugins/
  7. Disattivare (eventualmente) il plugin NextGEN SimpleViewer prima di attivare NextGEN FlashViewer: i due plugin non possono coesistere a causa dell’utilizzo di un unico file viewer.swf
  8. Attivare NextGEN FlashViewer
  9. Impostare la configurazione (admin - Bacheca/Galleria/FlashViewer)
Utilizzo

Utilizzo:

Per mostrare le addon offerte da NextGEN FlashViewer all’interno di un post o di una pagina del proprio sito sarà necesario inserire una tag con il numero identificativo della galleria**, la larghezza della immagine, l’altezza della immagine ed il link (facoltativo) . Poniamo ora l’esempio di volere utilizzare una galleria già esistente per mostrarla con le addon NextGEN FlashViewer. Sarà sufficiente sostituire il termine ID-Galleria con il numero identificativo ed aggiungere i valori numerici per le dimensioni:

[simpleviewer=ID-galleria,larghezza,altezza,LINK(facoltativo)]

[tiltviewer=ID-galleria,larghezza,altezza,LINK(facoltativo)]

[autoviewer=ID-galleria,larghezza,altezza,LINK(facoltativo)]

[pcviewer=ID-galleria,larghezza,altezza,LINK(facoltativo)]

Per poter infine utilizzare con il TiltViewer le immagini dal proprio account su flickr, sarà necessario comporre la tag come segue (ricordandosi di inserire all’inizio ed al termine della lista delle tag il segno più):

[tiltviewer=flickr,larghezza,altezza,+lista, tag, separate, da, una, virgola+]

SimpleViewer

SimpleViewer

[simpleviewer=8,580,475]

TiltViewer

TiltViewer

[tiltviewer=8,580,475]

AutoViewer

AutoViewer

[autoviewer=9,580,475]

PostcardViewer

PostcardViewer

[pcviewer=8,580,475]

flickr

flickr

[tiltviewer=flickr,580,475,+sky,sunset,colours,sea,Yamaha+]

Localizzazione

Localizzazione:

Ho realizzato il file di localizzazione in italiano per il plugin. Affinché i file di traduzione del plugin possano essere sempre disponibili ed aggiornati alla ultima versione, sarà necessario scaricare l’archivio nggflash-it_IT.po qui sotto ed estrarre quindi i file nggflash-it_IT.po e nggflash-it_IT.mo. Ad operazione avvenuta, caricare i due file nella sotto-cartella langs/ del plugin sostituendo quelli già presenti.

http://gidibao.net/wp-content/plugins/downloads-manager/img/icons/default.gif download: NextGEN FlashViewer in italiano (14.20KB)
added: 08/08/2008
clicks: 201
description: File di localizzazione in italiano

Versione

NextGEN FlashViewer

Versione: 1.0

Ultimo aggiornamento: 13-7-2008

Versione minima di WordPress: 2.1.0 o superiore

Compatibile sino alla: WP 2.6.1

WP-Plugin Directory
SVN repository

Approfondimenti

Articoli utili:

  1. Inside Plugins: NextGEN Gallery
  2. Inside Plugins: NextGEN ImageFlow addon
  3. Inside Plugins: NextGEN Smooth Gallery addon
  4. Inside Plugins: NextGEN Gallery SimpleViewer
  5. Inside Plugins: NextGEN Gallery Polaroid addon
  6. NextGEN Gallery header
Note

*é necessaria l’installazione della NextGEN Gallery affinché NextGEN FlashViewer possa funzionare correttamente.

**creata in precedenza con la NextGEN Gallery

credits: le immagini inserite in SimpleViewer, TiltViewer ed in PostcardViewer sono di the-father; quelle di flickr sono mie

Continue reading

Otakon 2008 Aftermath Part II

Okay, just a few last thoughts on Otakon 2008. The Saturday masquerade is always a must see event for me and for the most part it was a lot of fun, including the walk to the Mariner Arena and the reactions of the “normal” people on the street to a parade of cosplayers. But one thing I will not forget is the reaction the audience had to one of the youth division cosplayers.

The girl was cosplaying Sakura and was probably about 13 years old. She got on stage to sing and totally froze. She looked really scared. But rather than boo her off the stage, the audience started clapping and cheering her on. So she started to sing and the encouragement continued as people started waving glow sticks and cell phones. From my seat in the upper deck, it looked like a sea of floating embers. For that moment I thought, wow, there really is hope for the human race.

So I think I’ll end on that note. I sang, I danced, and of course I got locked out of my room just like last year and had to deal with the front desk staff…in drag!XD It was fun. I stayed Sunday night so that I could cosplay Sunday and drive home Monday during the daylight hours, and get a speeding ticket in Pennsylvania…T_T Can’t wait to do it again next year, minus the ticket!

Continue reading

The Day After: Photoshop CS4 Resources

We didn’t get a chance to beta test Photoshop CS4 here at Go Media, but it looks like a worthy upgrade. Here’s a collection of previews & feature lists of the latest & greatest Adobe Photoshop.

If you’re in a rush here is the meat of what I gathered from picking through these previews:

Photoshop CS4 will..

  • use the graphics card more aggressively, allowing for smooth zooming, canvas rotation, and other cool 3D effects with good performance
  • have the same UI enhancements as the rest of the creative suit: tabs, frames, etc.
  • include intelligent scaling, like the kind we’ve ooo’d and ahhh’d about for the past year
  • be more flexible because of non-destructive editing via new adjustment options
  • may possibly have multi-touch support
  • have better masking.

Previews & Feature Lists

Camera Town Preview
This is one of the best previews I could find. Really comprehensive, but long. Looks to be straight from the horse’s mouth.
cameratown

Pop Photo Hands On
A nice down-to-earth look at some helpful features.
pop photo

Macworld previews the content-aware scaling
Macworld talks about how cool this feature is. Does anybody remember that this technology was developed a year or more ago, and bought by Adobe?
macworld The Day After: Photoshop CS4 Resources

MacNN Multi Touch
MacNN lets us know that Photosohp will support multi-touch with certain hardware. Cool. Useable?
macnn The Day After: Photoshop CS4 Resources

ZDNet Photoshp CS4 First Look
The ZDNet flavor of Photosohp CS4 preview. Nice, but could use some screenshots.
adnet

Videos

Sneak preview from Photoshop World Orlando

New 3D Effects

Content Aware Scaling (yawn)

Smooth zooming & rotating

Continue reading

Manchester United vs. Bolton preview

Good news for United, Nemanja Vidic is set to return from suspension. While Edwin van der Sar is said to have recovered from a knee injury sustained during the Manchester United vs. Chelsea match. Also Ronaldo will be in the starting line-up.

While Bolton will have Johan Elmander and Matt Taylor back from injury.

So for all you gamblers out there, I would definitely bet on United.

Continue reading

prev posts