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Participant
February 27, 2023
Question

Don't color manage and use working color profile photoshop for printing full sublimation

  • February 27, 2023
  • 2 replies
  • 6368 views

before strating someone taught me to use cmyk mode and the res 75 for editing sublimation and i was using it for a month and noticing that the print out is not so great and researched, so i changed it to res 300 but then i encounter the assign profile and checking all the past layouts the assign profile is Don't color manage, but what does Don't color manage or use working color profile affect when printing?

 

sorry i'am just new at layouting for sublimation printing so i don't know the do and don'ts yet. i don't know where to ask, obviously the one who taught me is out of the question because of the past experience. I hope my concern makes sense and hoping for your help.

 

Thank you.

 

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2 replies

TheDigitalDog
Inspiring
February 27, 2023

There is no "no color management" in Photoshop. Even using "Don't Color Manage" assumes some color space based on your color settings. Sublimation printing isn't unique or new to the need for color management (in fact, my first digital printer in 1993 was a dye sub from Kodak). Who's making the prints if not you, what device, and what exactly are they requesting from you? 

Author “Color Management for Photographers" & "Photoshop CC Color Management/pluralsight"
Participant
February 28, 2023

So the assign profile "Don't color manage and use working color profile" don't matter if printing sublimation?
I do the layouts and printing, I'am using a dye sublimation printer (Printer Kin Zen JC-1800i model), they're requesting for the outcome of the color to be more vibrant, before i was using the res 75 but the outcome is low quality so changed it to res 300, so i just assume assigning profile changes something to the color when printing making it vibrant

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 28, 2023

Resolution is something else, it has nothing to do with color profile. 300 ppi is probably overkill for this; 75 ppi maybe a bit low. Again, ask them what they want.

 

But note that this doesn't change the file. The file is just pixels. Pixels per inch, ppi, is metadata. It's an instruction for pixel density, and thus final physical size given the pixel dimensions of the file.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
February 27, 2023

I don't have any experience with sublimation and don't know what color space (profile) the printer wants to receive the file in. You'll have to ask the printer about that.

 

What I can say is that the document profile is and should be independent from that. There should always be an embedded document profile and you should never pick "don't color manage". That's a recipe for disaster. The embedded document profile for all your master files should be a standard color space like sRGB, Adobe RGB or ProPhoto.

 

Always keep color management policies set to "preserve embedded profiles". The profile is what defines the colors. Without a profile, it's undefined and can come out as anything at all.

 

Then, when the printer tells you what profile they want, convert a copy to that and send that (Edit > Convert to Profile).

Participant
February 28, 2023

Oh I see, keeping note on this, thank you so much