Convert Document Colors To Another Profile (Photoshop); Convert Document Colors To Multichannel, Device Link, Or Abstract Color Profiles (Photoshop); Convert Document Colors To Another Profile (Acrobat) - Adobe Photoshop CS6 User Manual

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not want to color-manage the document. After you remove the profile from a document, the appearance of colors is defined by the
application's working space profiles, and you can no longer embed a profile in the document.
Assign Current Working Space [working space] Assigns the working space profile to the document.
Assign Profile Lets you select a different profile. The application assigns the new profile to the document without converting colors to the
profile space. This may dramatically change the appearance of the colors as displayed on your monitor.
3. Choose a rendering intent for each type of graphic in your document. For each graphic type, you can choose one of the four standard
intents, or the Use Color Settings Intent, which uses the rendering intent currently specified in the Color Settings dialog box. For more
information on rendering intents, search in Help.
The graphic types include the following:
Solid Color Intent Sets the rendering intent for all vector art (solid areas of color) in InDesign native objects.
Default Image Intent Sets the default rendering intent for bitmap images placed in InDesign. You can still override this setting on an image-
by-image basis.
After-Blending Intent Sets the rendering intent to the proofing or final color space for colors that result from transparency interactions on
the page. Use this option when your document includes transparent objects.
4. To preview the effects of the new profile assignment in the document, select Preview, and then click OK.

Convert document colors to another profile (Photoshop)

1. Choose Edit > Convert To Profile.
2. Under Destination Space, choose the color profile to which you want to convert the document's colors. The document will be converted to
and tagged with this new profile.
3. Under Conversion Options, specify a color management engine, a rendering intent, and black point and dither options (if available). (See
Color conversion options.)
4. To flatten all layers of the document onto a single layer upon conversion, select Flatten Image.
5. To preview the effects of the conversion in the document, select Preview.

Convert document colors to Multichannel, Device Link, or Abstract color profiles (Photoshop)

1. Choose Edit > Convert To Profile.
2. Click Advanced. The following additional ICC profile types are available under Destination Space:
Multichannel Profiles that support more than four color channels. These are useful when printing with more than four inks.
Device Link Profiles that transform from one device color space to another, without using an intermediate color space in the process. These
are useful when specific mappings of device values (like 100% black) are required.
Abstract Profiles that enable custom image effects. Abstract profiles can have LAB/XYZ values for both input and output values, which
enables generation of a custom LUT to achieve the desired special effect.
Note: Gray, RGB, LAB, and CMYK color profiles are grouped by category in Advanced view. They are combined on the Profile menu in
Basic view.
3. To preview the effects of the conversion in the document, select Preview.

Convert document colors to another profile (Acrobat)

You convert colors in a PDF by using Tools > Print Production > Convert Colors. For more information, see the color conversion topics in Acrobat
Help.
More Help topics
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