How
often have you faced the daunting task of trying to make all your
illustrations retain the same color values, when imported from one
Adobe software into another? Well, with all the newer Adobe software
packages, you can do just that. All these applications use the same
interface and color settings files for color management, so you can be
sure that the colors you see in Adobe Photoshop 6.0 and 7.0 will
appear the same in Adobe Illustrator 10, Adobe InDesign 2.0, and even
Adobe Acrobat 5.0.

1. Create or obtain color profiles for your devices.
Assemble accurate ICC profiles for each of the devices you use:
scanners, monitors, digital cameras, printers, and so on. You may be
able to use the profiles provided by device manufacturersbut
individual devices often vary from the default profiles, so custom
profiles give you the most accurate results.

2. Customize a color settings file.
Choose
Edit > Color Settings in InDesign, Photoshop, or Illustrator. From
the Settings pop-up menu, choose the predefined color settings file
that most closely resembles your workflow. Then specify the profiles
for your devices in the Color Settings dialog box. Click Save and name
the custom color settings file. To ensure that InDesign, Photoshop,
Illustrator, and Acrobat can access the settings file, save it to its
default location: Program Files/Common Files/Adobe/Color/Settings
folder (Windows) or System Folder: Application Support: Adobe: Color:
Settings folder (Mac OS).
You
might notice minor differences in the Color Settings dialog box in
these applications. In InDesign, you need to select Enable Color
Management before you can specify settings. In Photoshop or
Illustrator, select Advanced Mode to see more fields in the dialog box.
Predefined
color settings files are each designed to provide consistent color in a
particular publishing workflow under typical conditions. In some cases,
the predefined settings files provide sufficient color management.
However, you can achieve the most consistent color using ICC profiles
created for your specific devices.

3. Apply the custom color settings file in each application.
When
you open the file in another Adobe application, apply the same color
settings: In InDesign, Photoshop, and Illustrator, choose Edit >
Color Settings; in Acrobat, choose Edit > Preferences> General,
and then click Color Management in Acrobat. Choose the file you named
from the Settings pop-up menu.
You
may want to modify the settings for fields not included in the saved
color settings file. For example, Photoshop is the only application
that designates a working space specifically for spot colors, so if the
color settings file was saved from InDesign, the default Spot working
space is selected in Photoshop.
If
you regularly print to different devices, or work with different input
devices (such as scanners or digital cameras), you can create
additional color settings files that are customized for those
workflows. Save each file with a name that clearly states its purpose,
so that you can identify it easily.
By
default, Photoshop and Illustrator embed the profiles designated in the
Color Settings dialog box when you save a file in native format or as a
PDF, JPEG, or TIFF file. If color management is enabled in InDesign,
InDesign embeds profiles when you save a document or export it to PDF.