In Windows even some "professional" graphic applications are not color
profile aware, so your office application will ignore your saturation
tweaks. Maybe Windows Color System can do this, you need to try play with
it.
2016-10-12 5:53 GMT+03:00 Graeme Gill <graeme@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>:
hmhef wrote:
Hi,
I am trying to create a custom LCD profile to reduce saturation of thescreen,
it's not clear to me how you think this will work, or why this is the
mechanism
you are exploring.
I do not have any color calibrating equipment, instead, i can createfiles with lists of
fake color measurements.can create scripts
Can someone please advice on steps required to do so ? knowing that I
to output any required fake data, and i have scripts that can alsoconvert between color
spaces, for example, i can take input in RGB, reduce color saturation,then output to XYZ
/ LAB / LSV / ..etc.
In theory, simply take an existing profile (say sRGB), create a set of RGB
test points
and use fakeread to create corresponding PCS values. Increase the
saturation of the
PCS values, then make a new profile.
I am not worried about accurate color output, only want to reducesaturation (will only be
used for office environment, like spreadsheets..etc)
There are lots of other approaches that would seem easier, such as choosing
the colors you want in the applications themselves, or adjusting the
display to be less saturated. Can you explain why you want to change ICC
profiles instead ?
Graeme Gill.