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3d Gamut Viewer Windows
четверг 25 апреля admin 10
3D RGB Gamut Viewer Print. Including Windows 8 and Windows 10. However, the viewer will not work with later versions of Firefox (after version 47) or with 64-bit.
Glowing minerals wrote: Thank-you, Wayne. My old home computer can't quite handle the first web site. If you want to see 3D gamut plots you have several choices: 1. Install a free VRML viewer. VRML is almost obsolete except for displaying 3D gamut plots.
For this it works really well. Also, Dry Creek Photo has a bunch of 3D color gamuts in VRML I am using the Cortona 3D VRML viewer and it works on both my 32 bit XP and my 64 bit Win 7 systems. If you use Windows XP, you can install Microsoft's free Color Control Panel Applet for Windows XP. This gives you more control over installing profiles and also contains a 3D profile viewer that will let you compare two profiles. Win 7 and Vista don't have any built in capability to view profile gamuts.
Mac's ColorSync will display gamut plots. Buy commercial profile management software.
The cheapest commercial program I know about is ColorThink 2 As far as I know. If anybody else knows of any other options for viewing gamut plots, I'd like to hear about them. I'll try them out during breaks on my workstation at work over the next several days. Those CIE plots in your screen captures look to be just what I'm looking for. Bronxbomber provided the CIE plot screen shots. If you get a VRML viewer working, the Argyll color management system has several utility programs that will generate gamut plots in 3D. You can compare as many gamuts as you want in a single graph.
You don't need to install anything. It comes as a zip file. All you need to do is unzip it any put the programs you are interested in some place on your path.
Look at and Run profiles through iccgamut to make.gam files. Then use viewgam to combine as many.gam files as you want into a single VRML file. IMO, this works really well because gamut plots in VRML can be full screen (or larger) and you can study the gamut plots as close as you want. And if you know about the innards of ICC profiles, other Argyll utility programs give you a good head start at dissecting. Such as iccdump Dump the contents of an ICC profile as text. (Also note that VRML files are plain ASCII. Just saying.) Wayne.