Stands for "Standard RGB" (and RGB stands for Red-Green-Blue"). All the colors ...
Standard RGB sRGB is calibrated colorimetric RGB color space well suited to Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) monitors, television, scanners, digital cameras, and printing systems. sRGB was developed by the ICC.
Abbreviation for Standard RGB. sRGB is the international color space standard created by the IEC (International Electrotechnical Commission). Performing all color adjustments in this color space minimizes color disparities from input and output data collected via PC peripheral devices, such as digital cameras, printers, and monitors.
A recommended default color setting that helps achieve a consistent color environment for PC-based applications. With sRGB, the image colors seen by the user on screen can be reproduced elsewhere, such as printers.
A color space that was developed in October 1999 and defined with specifications compliant to the international color standard IEC 61966-2-1. It is a system of color spaces that determines tone, saturation, and brightness. This enables computer operating systems to easily decode and translate color expression into actual color displays. View Demo
The color management method used to maintain color consistency between devices which adhere to the sRGB standard.
A Standard Default Color Space for the Internet created by Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft to support a standard color space within the Microsoft operating systems, HP products, and others.
A standard color space used as the default color space within the Windows 98 color management system (ICM 2.0).
The device-independent color space specified for use on the World Wide Web
refers to a standard default RGB color space. This is a device-independent color space designed to remove any color-bias from the representation of an image on the specified device.
sRGB is a color standard developed by Microsoft for identical colors at PC peripherals. Is increasingly used with digital projectors. The aim is the exact display at any device (monitors, plasma displays, projectors) of colors of the original artwork.
Windows software that is designed so you get WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) color output. This software prints colors as you see them on your screen.
Standard RGB color space, a means of specifying precisely how any given RGB value should appear on a monitor or printed paper or any other output device. sRGB was promoted by the ICC and submitted for standardization by the IEC.
(Standardised red, green, blue). IEC colour space based on RGB but which has been normalised. Standard in the Internet, with Windows 2000, with all digital cameras, many programs and a growing number of hardware products. In the near future, it should enable a uniform colour environment to be achieved in all private, professional and E-business environments.
The lowest common denominator for the RGB model. It is the smallest color space defined by the RGB color model, thus guaranteeing accurate color data between unpredictable devices. It is used when someone wants to develop a format and guarantee that the file can be recognized by any other system, without predicting what the characteristics of that foreign system are, such as setting a minimum standard by the ISO. It is not a recommended color space for high quality color work, as it is a clipped version of the larger color space in the RGB color model - use Adobe RGB or Bruce RGB instead.
Standard RGB (Red Green Blue) is an RGB colour spacecreated cooperatively by Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft Corporation. SRGB defines the red, green, and blue primaries as colours where one of the three channels is at the maximum value and the other two are at zero.
Standard-RGB. An RGB color space with a gamma value of 2.0 and a white point of 5,000 Kelvin which can be displayed by a multitude of monitors, scanners, color printers and cameras.
A standard default red green blue (RGB) color space that is device independent.