TenLeftFingers píše v Po 12. 04. 2010 v 17:39 +0200:
You're welcome. Party due to this topic, I did an overview of color
management involving separate+. You can check it out here:
http://www.brankovukelic.com/post/513356271/gimp-color-management-for-dtp
I saw that and I have it bookmarked
Frank Gore píše v Pá 15. 01. 2010 v 17:12 -0500:
But this begs the question, what does Gimp use to determine the
embedded color profile? The EXIF data, or something else? Because even
if I change that tag from Uncalibrated to Adobe RGB, it still
doesn't change how Gimp treats it.
Again, you
Frank Gore píše v Čt 14. 01. 2010 v 21:35 -0500:
Sorry, those were links to the version of the pictures as displayed by
Picasa, which has the metadata stripped. The direct download links are
as follows:
I thought your camera would be very unusual to provide JPEGs w/o
metadata...
Adobe RGB:
Frank Gore píše v St 13. 01. 2010 v 18:20 -0500:
In any case, like I mentioned in my original post, I specifically have
it set to Ask what to do in the Preferences, and it doesn't ask.
I agree with you, it is definitely a bug. GIMP should not assume that
JPEG is in sRGB colour space when
David Gowers píše v Čt 14. 01. 2010 v 18:56 +1030:
On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Frank Gore g...@projectpontiac.com wrote:
color profile and ask me about it when I open the file. Isn't that how
it's supposed to work? That's what other applications do, for example
Digikam/showFoto.
In
Norman Silverstone píše v Út 12. 01. 2010 v 20:50 +:
The great thing about GIMP is that it is free so you can try it, at no
cost to yourself, and see if it will do what you want it to do.
But so is Photoshop. 30 days trial :)
The difficulty is that whilst GIMP will run on
Michael J. Hammel píše v Čt 25. 09. 2008 v 11:57 -0600:
To convert back to TIFF you can use ImageMagick's convert tool.
According to this discussion:
http://www.imagemagick.org/discourse-server/viewtopic.php?f=1t=11600
convert will retain EXIF data. This is true as long as you're simply