Quote:
Originally Posted by jr20516v
My highstreet printer ONLY will use Adobe RGB.
I really only get one choice as i am inserting the image into a photobook [total images are finally arranged into a PDF and sent to the printer....each image numbered for the applicable numbered page ]
Thus sending a TIFF and a Jpeg of the same image would confuse the system and would only allow one of them onto the page at the end of the day.
Also of concern....TIFF = 16 BIT [my preferred choice ]
Jpeg =8 BIT
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i did say JPG OR TIFF not both

you didn't say what profile you are using to edit the image from RAW ( i take it it is a raw file you are editing ? )
if your editing in adobeRGB and the high street printers are printing in adobeRGB there really shouldn't be an issue unless the printers they use cannot print the whole adobeRGB colour space ( which to me seems unlikely )
i take it the icc colour profile file they sent you is adobeRGB ICC ?
if it is there should be no difference as the gamut should be the same regardless of what the icc profile is intended for
it sounds to me as if the icc profile they have sent you is not adobeRGB
a typical print from an image that has an adobeRGB colourspace but printed to a printer expecting a sRGB colour space will look lifeless with all the vibrancy missing and this is obvious in soft proofing or print preview before the image is printed
if you then re edit the raw file ( which has no colour space regardless what is set in the camera until you assign it one in the RAW editor of choice ) with a sRGB colour space the final image will match the preview or soft proof and this tells me there has to be a colour space miss match somewhere along the line