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tools/adobeXD

Adobe XD color profile problem - XD has no color management

community.adobe.com/t5/adobe-xd/color-profile-problem/td-p/9946275?page=1

 

color profile problem

what color profile does XD work with? because i work with standard sRGB (IEC61966-2.1) and i got an EIZO monitor, so i see exactly what i get. but pictures in sRGB in photoshop looks different than in XD. XD has much more red in it. this alos happens in th

community.adobe.com

[problem]

XD has no color management

The team informed me that the difference is because Photoshop uses color correction/color spaces, and XD uses raw device colors.. - Preran

It means whatever I export from XD lacks an applied color profile. It's really important since browsers interpret image data differently, when they lack a color profile. E.g. Firefox uses the maximum of the display's color space while Safari uses the active display color space. This results in unwanted oversaturated colors in Firefox. This should be a high priority feature since Adobe XD should be a professional software for professional work. Nobody would even think about exporting a print-PDF without color management. - Tronald_Dump

 

[solution - at least someting we can do]

For more info, see Color Management (set color profiles) – Adobe XD Feedback : Feature Requests & Bugs

+ Please vote for the feature request using the link above for the team to prioritize it. 

 

 

 

adobexd.uservoice.com/forums/353007-adobe-xd-feature-requests/suggestions/17480899-color-managed-application

 

Color Management (set color profiles)

XD should be a color managed application. I'm not sure what the full context of color management is within the UI/UX industry is, or if it's something that many pay attention to, or if it's just left un-managed. Currently a vast majority of designers are u

adobexd.uservoice.com

Color Management (set color profiles)

XD should be a color managed application.

I'm not sure what the full context of color management is within the UI/UX industry is, or if it's something that many pay attention to, or if it's just left un-managed. 
Currently a vast majority of designers are using high gamut displays to design. Our final output will however differ greatly without some proper color management implemented. If color managment is implemented, we can at least visually soft proof our design and colors to specific devices (ie: New iOS devices that support P3 color gamut), or older sRGB devices. 
At the same time sRGB images used won't expand to the display's high color gamut, making them look over saturated.