daveb2 Posted October 8, 2020 Share Posted October 8, 2020 When soft proofing a photo, when should the soft proofing be done? Since it can significantly change the way a photo looks, it seems to me soft proofing should the first step when editing a photo. But I really don't know. I have not found a tutorial on this exact question. Thanks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Staff stokerg Posted October 8, 2020 Staff Share Posted October 8, 2020 Hi daveb2, I personally would always edit my photo and soft proof as the last step. I guess the theory being you have the image edited to how you want it to look on screen and you use that as the starting point for Soft Proofing. I'm sure if anyone knows of a better technical reason why this tends to be the last step before printing they will post Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
daveb2 Posted October 8, 2020 Author Share Posted October 8, 2020 stokerg, Thanks for the reply. In searching for an answer to my question I found this response to another's similar question: "The idea is that you place additional adjustments on top of the soft-proof adjustment to get the on-screen image to look right, then turn off the soft-proof before printing or exporting." (1/11/20 by walt.farrell) Would you or anyone agree with this statement? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Belifant Posted October 9, 2020 Share Posted October 9, 2020 It depends what you are planning to do. Print? Then definitely soft proof on with the correct CMYK profile right from the beginning as the very first step. (And of course turn it off for export ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lepr Posted October 9, 2020 Share Posted October 9, 2020 8 hours ago, daveb2 said: stokerg, Thanks for the reply. In searching for an answer to my question I found this response to another's similar question: "The idea is that you place additional adjustments on top of the soft-proof adjustment to get the on-screen image to look right, then turn off the soft-proof before printing or exporting." (1/11/20 by walt.farrell) Would you or anyone agree with this statement? Switch off the Soft Proof Adjustment before printing or exporting, but it should be the top layer in the document when switched on. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Belifant Posted October 9, 2020 Share Posted October 9, 2020 Ah right, should have mentioned that too. The quoted statement is wrong. Soft Proof adjustment always at the top of the layer stack. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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