Make sure the InDesign color settings preserve embedded RGB profiles. For the purposes of this discussion it doesn't matter which profile, as long as it's there. Save out as RGB from Photoshop, and make sure the color profile is embedded when you save the file. I like to travel with phone for pics.my Nikon is a pain re charging batteries overseas and carrying the heavy stuff.but next time I'm taking phone for phone and Nikon for photos!!! Good luck with printing. One album I did, I had a mix of photos from phone and om a trip and I noticed a consistent muddiness from my phone pics compared to the sharp true color from the Nikon. Maybe if you have a home printer you could experiment using different profiles in Photoshop with camera pics and phone pics. My problem might be that way back when my techy refused to set me up with Apple due to cost and other issues like it crashed all the time, and I got used to PC and it's cost effective for me. I have never printed directly from my phone to my printer to see if that prints true, but then I can't use photoshop and dicker with it. That doesn't change the light in print photos for me. You could try a different profile in Photoshop for messing with photos for print. There is no backlight on paper.so the colors are muddy. Printing is complex and frustrating but I've been doing it for decades. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I think there is a tech difference between what we see on our phone/computer screens and what we print on papers. So now, when taking photos I want to print, I use my bulky, less convenient Nikons. Printing online with different companies is tricky.but I never resolved that issue with print media. When I print photos from my Nikon 5200 or other Nikon cameras the color comes out true to what I see on my screen. Not sure if this is scientifically correct, but when I print photos from my Samsung 8 into online albums or home printer, they print dull.
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