Luminous Landscape Forum

Raw & Post Processing, Printing => Colour Management => Topic started by: mbalensiefer on July 11, 2008, 11:40:42 pm

Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: mbalensiefer on July 11, 2008, 11:40:42 pm
Does anyone recommend a good image viewer that goes by the "calibrated display"'s native color...or one that can be color-calibrated?

Windows Picture and Fax Viewer adds unnecessary color, and ACDSee 10.0 seems to remove contrast and color (and makes one have to deal with slow load times plus index folders)

I prefer to view my images in full screen mode, and Windows' viewer--and others I've found--adds bulky content which prevents the image from using every display pixel available.

Thank you!
Michael
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: Peter_DL on July 12, 2008, 05:44:03 am
Canon’s Zoombrowser EX version 6.0 is truly color-managed as far as I can tell, means that the monitor profile is used for conversion and display on screen. Probably there’s a free download somewhere in the support section for their cameras. IF you shoot with a Canon, Raw files are previewed as well, while emulating the in-camera flavor of conversion. There’s a full screen mode, although it is to mention that the software is slow in many aspects.

Windowz’ Picture & Fax viewer as well as their Raw viewer power tool like to convert everything to sRGB for monitor output (at least when I tried the last time), so that there’s easily a discrepancy with a monitor’s de facto given gamut.

Of course, there’s the Adobe range of color-savvy products…

Peter

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Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: dalethorn on July 12, 2008, 08:37:48 am
I use IrfanView on a PC.  It doesn't have any negative color issues that I'm aware of.  It's free, it has a one-key toggle between full screen and normal, one-key toggle for full size, one key for image info, settings for how full screen is expressed for images larger and smaller than the screen, view by filename or date etc., and much more.
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: mbalensiefer on July 13, 2008, 11:35:56 pm
Thanks, folks.

 goto
http://www.photo-freeware.net/zoombrowser-ex.php (http://www.photo-freeware.net/zoombrowser-ex.php)
 For Zoombrowser

and

http://www.irfanview.com/ (http://www.irfanview.com/)
 For Irfanview.

 Gret board. Thanks for answering my post with expedience. I will install these and test tonight.

Michael
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: DavidB on July 16, 2008, 10:21:42 pm
Irfanview doesn't use the display's profile as far as I'm aware: just sending the data directly to the screen.

If you want something that does profile conversion on the fly you have several options, including at least:There are presumably more as well...
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: AxelR on October 16, 2008, 02:24:09 am
Quote from: mbalensiefer
Does anyone recommend a good image viewer that goes by the "calibrated display"'s native color...or one that can be color-calibrated?

For Windows users I suggest (my own) FastPictureViewer (http://www.fastpictureviewer.com), which fully supports embedded profiles and calibrated monitors.
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: mbalensiefer on October 20, 2008, 03:17:17 am
Thanks! I tried FastImageViewer last night.

 When I go to "Options" under this program, should I turn the profile to "off", or should I turn it to the calibrated profile that I am currently using for my monitor? If I do the latter, wouldn't I be using this profile "twice"?

Michael
Title: Color-calibrated Picture Viewer
Post by: AxelR on October 20, 2008, 11:27:36 pm
Quote from: mbalensiefer
[...] should I turn it to the calibrated profile that I am currently using for my monitor?

Yes, just check the box and select your monitor profile in the list. The conversion is not performed twice as nothing really happens when you set a monitor profile in control panel. This is just a place where applications can go look for your preferences (and you can put multiple profiles in there, by the way), but the actual conversion really is handled by the applications. Now, if you use some special software that loads with Windows and runs at all times to "color manage" your desktop, you might want to make some tests. You could use Photoshop as reference, and you should get exactly the same rendition in FPV if everything is working and set as it should.

You can get small images with esoteric profiles from this page (http://www.color.org/version4html.xalter) (ICC website), just right-click and save them, they are useful to find out if CM is working as it should with any app.

Hope this helps,
Axel