![]() Most commercial printers will accept sRGB as they'll be able to do their own profiling at the print stage to get the best results for your work.įor the CMYK color model, it's best to consult your print partner for an appropriate CMYK color profile recommendation. Assigning color profilesĪffinity Designer lets you choose global default color profiles, assign a color profile as you create a document, or at any point during your session. Alternatively, the exported file can be unprofiled by not embedding the document or named profile. On export, you can choose to embed the document's or a named color profile to ensure accurate color management. When placing images into an existing document, the image's embedded color profile will always be converted to the document's current working space. You have the option to convert it to the current working color space. In Affinity Designer, an opened file's color profile is honored by default. To ensure that the color looks the same on each device, we use color profiles to tell the device how to display or render the color information.ĭocuments with the correct profile for a calibrated device should closely match. As not all devices can display the same color gamut it can lead to colors looking different on each device.ĭocuments without color profiles (or with unsupported color profiles) may not look the same across each device. When we share these documents between devices, the device has to work out how to display the color. The color and tonal information in a digital document is stored as numbers. ![]()
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