Quote Originally Posted by Dave Johnston View Post
Hey Denise, the images look fine here, no greenyness. The one thing I would suggest is that you check your color management and make sure that they match what you are attempting to display/print in. I know that my computer originally tried to suggest a specific color profile and I wanted the sRGB one, as that is what most printers I would use are calibrated to. Are you using a Windows computer?

If so follow the following. Click on the windows icon in the lower left corner and in the search panel type "color management" and click on the matching query result.

Then you should see a tab that says "advanced" on the far right side of the color management panel. The first select able area should be the "device profile" and this should read sRGB IEC61966. If it doesn't say this, make the change using the down arrow on the select able field. This is all assuming you are using sRGB color profile in your camera (which you most likely are).

There should be a button at the bottom that asks for you to change the "system defaults" clicking it will bring up a similar looking window to before, follow the same steps in assuring your color profile matches.

Following this you should not see any more green.


.... unless its green when you shot it... Like grass, thats still alive. Or maybe new money (American Dollars [to be culturally sensitive]).


Dave.
Thanks, Dave! I did the check that you suggested and yep, it is set to sRGB IEC61966-2.1 which is the same thing that shows for my setting in the bottom middle of the screen in Camera RAW 7.3.

Also, I don't think it is just a green issue. In this photo below, after uploading I see absolutely no detail in his tail like I do before the upload and shades of reddish tinge in his upper back leg after the upload which I don't see prior to the upload.

So, can it be a Chrome issue? If so, I am going back to IE.


Abominable Snow Puppy by Denise Trocio ( www.dtrociophotography.com), on Flickr