Hi,
I'm trying to make a teaser for the upcoming version of Fanaleds, but I'm stuck at an annoying bug...
Basically when I add the background I've made (that's also on the homepage), it looks fine in Sony Vegas, and when I watch it via Windows Explorer, but when it's rendered it's horribly over saturated?
I had this same problem on our website when I tried to save the image. It looked fine on my PC, but on an other PC it looked really white, and on an other PC it looked really over saturated as well. We solved this by saving the images on the Photoshop of a friend of mine (who designed the website).
I assume it has something to do with color profiles? I think I have tried pretty much anything now. When I export it to web, I unchecked sRGB and color profile, but that didn't do anything. I also changed the workspace color profile in Photoshop, but that didn't work either...
Does anyone have an idea? I've attached a picture of what I mean. It looks good in Windows and in Sony Vegas (before rendering), but after its rendered it's totally different. I hope you can see it, in case it looks the same for some people...
I'm trying to make a teaser for the upcoming version of Fanaleds, but I'm stuck at an annoying bug...
Basically when I add the background I've made (that's also on the homepage), it looks fine in Sony Vegas, and when I watch it via Windows Explorer, but when it's rendered it's horribly over saturated?
I had this same problem on our website when I tried to save the image. It looked fine on my PC, but on an other PC it looked really white, and on an other PC it looked really over saturated as well. We solved this by saving the images on the Photoshop of a friend of mine (who designed the website).
I assume it has something to do with color profiles? I think I have tried pretty much anything now. When I export it to web, I unchecked sRGB and color profile, but that didn't do anything. I also changed the workspace color profile in Photoshop, but that didn't work either...
Does anyone have an idea? I've attached a picture of what I mean. It looks good in Windows and in Sony Vegas (before rendering), but after its rendered it's totally different. I hope you can see it, in case it looks the same for some people...