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Color management and color profilesColor information is communicated using numbers. Because different devices use different methods to record and display color, the same numbers can be interpreted differently and appear to us as different colors. A color management system keeps track of all of these different ways of interpreting color and translates between them so that images can look the same regardless of the device used to display them. In general, a color profile is a description of a device-specific color space in terms of the transformations required to convert its color information to a device-independent color space. In the specific case of working within After Effects, ICC color profiles are used to convert to and from the working color space in the following general workflow:
The file format for color profiles is standardized by the ICC (International Color Consortium), and the files that contain them usually end with the .icc filename extension. After Effects comes with a large number of color profiles for color spaces for common (and some not so common) input and output types. For information on color profiles, see the International Color Consortium website at www.adobe.com/go/learn_ae_icc. Charles Poynton provides an excellent set of resources on his website regarding color technology and color terminology: www.adobe.com/go/learn_ae_poyntoncolor. After Effects loads color profiles from multiple locations, including the following:
When you create or install new profiles, put them in these folders. You can create a custom ICC profile using Adobe
Photoshop. In Photoshop, choose Edit > Color Settings. The RGB
and CMYK menus in the Working Spaces area of the Photoshop Color
Settings dialog box include options for saving and loading ICC profiles
and defining custom profiles.All color profiles used in a project are saved in the project, so you do not need to manually transfer color profiles from one system to another to open the project on another system. By default when you use color management, After Effects automatically adjusts colors to compensate for the differences in gamma between scene-referred color profiles and output-referred color profiles. (See Gamma and tone response.) Note: The NTSC (1953) color profile corresponds to obsolete television
equipment and should not be used. For standard-definition NTSC television,
use one of the SDTV NTSC color profiles.
When you choose a profile—for input, output, or simulation—the motion-picture film profiles do not appear unless your footage is Cineon footage or you select Show All Available profiles. If your footage is Cineon footage, only the motion-picture film profiles appear, unless you select Show All Available Profiles. The DPX Theater Preview and DPX Standard Camera profiles provided by After Effects 7 for use with the Proof Colors command have been replaced by the Kodak 2383 and Kodak 5218 profiles used with the Simulate Output command. Proof Colors has been replaced by Output Simulation. If you open an After Effects 7 project that uses DPX Scene and DPX Theater color profiles in the Color Profile Converter effect, After Effects CS3 or later does not automatically update these profiles to the new equivalent profiles (Kodak 5218/7218 Printing Density and Kodak 2383 Theater Preview). Instead, the profiles are listed as Embedded. You can convert your project by manually assigning the new profiles in After Effects CS3 or later. However, if the same profiles were assigned to the footage or selected in Proof Colors in After Effects 7, they are automatically updated to the new profiles in After Effects CS3 or later. |