Using LAB colors in a document
Call me an ignoramus, but I just recently discovered LAB colors. Is there any benefit for me to use them in a document for offset printing? Should I convert my CMYK images to LAB?
Note that I'm dealing with printers, who can't hit the colors right, so I was wondering if LAB is the solution, since its described as "more accurate" or something along those lines.
But if LAB requires special printing equipment, I doubt that these lousy printers have it. Or maybe LAB is for digital printing / scanning / photography or web design?
In any case, I doubt that LAB is a 'magic wand' that can solve all my printing-related problems. I've also read some negative opinions on it, but I don't fully understand them. I'm just an ignoramus.
I experimented a bit in Photoshop, where I converted a CMYK image to LAB and then I played a bit with the colors, the saturation and stuff. I applied the same adjustments to a CMYK version of the same photo (a plastic yellow duck with an orange bill). In the end, the "LAB duck" looked very vivid, while the "CMYK duck" literraly paled in comparison to it. So this means wider gamut, right?
Then I placed the "LAB duck" in Indesign and I checked it in Acrobat's Output Preview. The Object Inspector says "Colorspace: Lab", so it was properly detected. Then I switched between different simulations (Fogra, SWOP...) and the appearance of the duck was changing accordingly, but I didn't understand can this be printed on offset and how exactly it will appear. Perhaps this will convert to CMYK during the printing process?
Thanks for your explanations
