If you scan in Adobe RGB and save your original, you'll have all that information available. You won't lose anything by converting to sRGB. Then, if you someday decide to output to a device that takes a wide gamut, you'll have your original scan in wide gamut color space.
Paul
On Mar 5, 2005, at 7:49 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:


Yes, that's possible. I can scan in numerous color spaces, but what's the
point of using Adobe RGB if I'm going to be outputting to sRGB. Wouldn't
it make more sense to use the same color space from beginning to end?
Remember, I'm not making inkjet prints, so, from what I understand, the
Adobe space, because of its wider gamut, would have to be converted to sRGB
anyway.


Shel


[Original Message]
From: Paul Stenquist

Hi Shel,
Can you set up your scanner to yield Adobe RGB color space? I think
you're clipping some of the gamut by outputting to sRGB.
Paul





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