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I must admit living outside of the pre-press/pre-media room makes me less aware of all the difficulties of editing/color correcting a file before it hits the printer. My thoughts on LAB as standard colorspace comes from the thought that if the majority of ICC profiles are using LAB as the connection space it would eliminate a conversion.
I'm assuming Margulis using LAB over XYZ was just a limitation of the software?
What are your thoughts on why XYZ would be a better design space than LAB?
I don't mean that people should be actually working with XYZ but that the colour data describing any image should be in something like XYZ. I said earlier that this was due to scalability. If you have lots of very small points of colour, as in a file, at some time these have to be turned into larger areas of colour for the purpose of screening or other needs of an output device. That means that if you have a number of these points, each with its own colour value, you want the total average colour to be reasonably accurate for the area of the larger number of points.
The general problem is in the math and the physics. If you average the multiple XYZ values of all the points, both physically and mathematically, you basically get an accurate value for the combined colour of all these points. This does not work for Lab values. Averaging the L, a, and b values does not give you an average value of Lab that represents the actual resulting colour.