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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2 
User Guide 
To convert colors in a document to another profile
In Photoshop or InDesign, choose Edit > Convert To Profile.
Under Destination Space, choose the color profile to which you want to convert the document’s colors. The
document will be converted to and tagged with this new profile.
Under Conversion Options, specify a color management engine, a rendering intent, and black point and dither
To flatten all layers of the document onto a single layer upon conversion, select Flatten Image.
To preview the effects of the conversion in the document, select Preview. This preview becomes more accurate if
you select Flatten Image.
See also 
Color settings 
To customize color settings 
For most color-managed workflows, it is best to use a preset color setting which has been tested by Adobe Systems. 
Changing specific options is recommended only if you are knowledgeable about color management and very 
confident about the changes you make. 
After you customize options, you can save them as a preset. Saving color settings ensures that you can reuse them 
and share them with other users or applications. 
To save color settings as a preset, click Save in the Color Settings dialog box. To ensure that the application displays 
the setting name in the Color Settings dialog box, save the file in the default location. If you save the file to a 
different location, you must load the file before you can select the setting. 
To load a color settings preset that’s not saved in the standard location, click Load in the Color Settings dialog box, 
select the file you want to load, and click Open. 
About color working spaces 
working space is an intermediate color space used to define and edit color in Adobe applications. Each color model 
has a working space profile associated with it. You can choose working space profiles in the Color Settings dialog box. 
A working  space profile  acts  as  the source profile  for newly created  documents that use  the associated color  model.  
For example, if Adobe RGB (1998) is the current RGB working space profile, each new RGB document that you 
create will use colors within the Adobe RGB (1998) gamut. Working spaces also determine the appearance of colors 
in untagged documents. 
If you open a document embedded with a color profile that doesn’t match the working space profile, the application 
uses a color management policy to determine how to handle the color data. In most cases, the default policy is to 
preserve  the embedded profile. For  more  information on setting  up  color management policies,  see “About missing  
and mismatched color profiles” on page 269 and “Color Management Policy options” on page 270.