Skip to main content
PJ Rankin
Participating Frequently
June 15, 2018
Question

Massive colour shifts between printing small & large with same print settings

  • June 15, 2018
  • 8 replies
  • 3294 views

Hi everyone,

Hope you can help me before I pull my hair out. I've spent the morning ensuring that my prints are the right colour when proofing/test printing small prints of them. Then without changing any settings within photoshop, as soon as I print a larger version, on the same type of paper, I'm getting a huge colour shift in the blues to aquas particularly for no reason at all. I'm using the same Hahnmule photo rag 308 paper, same settings. I've tried both "photoshop handles colours" with both sRGB profile and hahnmule's own ICC profile (that made it even worse) and even "printer manages colours". The image's profile is PhotoRGB. I'm using an Epson P800. Editing on a 2017 MBP. As you can see there's quite a difference in the orange/pink tones also

Any explanation?

Thanks.

This topic has been closed for replies.

8 replies

nallelu
Participant
May 11, 2023

Hello! Did you ever solve this? Im having the exact same issue prints nice small and totally different color when its a larger image, same file same settings.... 😞

NB, colourmanagement
Community Expert
Community Expert
May 15, 2023

@nallelu my money's on a difference in print driver settings (or in image colourspace, does it have an embedded ICC profile?

If you describe the process you use to make these printed step-by-step then we can try help further. 

Post screenshots of the image profile info panel ('profile' is an option bottom left of PS document window), and the print settings dialog boxes, [just screenshot the dialog boxes please, or the info is too small to see here ]

 


neil barstow, colourmanagement net - adobe forum volunteer - co-author: 'getting colour right'
google me "neil barstow colourmanagement" for lots of free articles on colour management

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 16, 2018

I'm back to resampling artifacts, in an extremely grainy image, with different grain structure in the three color channels. This happens all the time and early DSLRs didn't cope well at all with the blue channel (it's improved now).

We should all be familiar with resampling artifacts in very noisy images. It happens all the time on screen.

PJ, just as a diagnostic test, make a copy with as much noise reduction and blurring as it takes to kill every last bit of grain. Are these different as well?

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 16, 2018

Hi Dave,

Apologies, I've attached the screen shots settings of the small prints, but as you can see, nothing has changed between the two settings other than size, unless there's somewhere else within the printer dialog where colour management could go askew that I've missed.

.

I've attached the settings also of the print driver but again, these do not appear to change for either small or large prints.

Thanks for all your help so far.

davescm
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 16, 2018

Hi

Again that last screenshot only shows the A4 print - I'll take your work for it that the A2 print settings are the same.

if all settings are the same I can't see why you are seeing a colour difference.

One comment though :

You have high speed and finest detail checked. They are not the best options for photo printing. High speed is bidirectional printing and can lead to banding if each head direction is not perfectly aligned. Finest detail is for sharpening text and graphics. You don't want that "enhancement" on photographic images. So I would (and do here) switch both off.

Dave

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 16, 2018

Thanks Dave,

I'll keep that advice in mind.

Jon-M-Spear
Legend
June 16, 2018

Are you printing two identical files of differing dimensions OR is the printer re-scaling the same piece of work?   Printer interpolation can shift colours.

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 16, 2018

Hi Jon,

thats interesting to know. It is the same file, I am resizing the document within photoshop before going to print so other than the printer being the final output stage, it has no responsibility on colour profile or sizing.

Thanks for your feedback.

PJ

davescm
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 16, 2018

Hi

I couldn't see if anything changed between sizes as your screenshots were all for the A2 print - nothing for the small print.

One additional thing to check though is the paper type in the print driver. I'm not talking about the profile - which I can see in your screenshot but the actual paper type selection in the Epson print driver.   The paper type selection tells the driver how to lay down the ink and if using non Epson papers there should be a recommendation with your paper of what paper type to select in the driver to go with that print profile.

In setting the print driver to use a large paper size is the paper type also being changed?

Dave

Bob_Hallam
Legend
June 15, 2018

I'm leaning towards a printer issue but... Just a few of questions first

1.) Is the paper the same between the small and large prints?

2.) Have you done a nozzel check print to make sure the heads are clean and functioning correctly?

ICC programmer and developer, Photographer, artist and color management expert, Print standards and process expert.
PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 16, 2018

Hi Bob,

Yes of course the paper is the same between between the two sizes. As for the nozzle check I was already in touch with Epson about this and on the test sheet only 1 tiny gap on one line in the yellow segment was missing but the rep told me that shouldn’t have such a drastic affect on the colour shift. Thanks for your suggestion though.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 16, 2018

https://forums.adobe.com/people/PJ+Rankin  wrote

I've also tried this using both the Hahnmule profile and AdobeRGB and also sRGB.

To be absolutely clear: you cannot "experiment" here. You need to use the correct profile. Only one profile is valid - the one that describes the actual printer/paper/ink combination.  Adobe RGB or sRGB or anything else don't apply here.

Color management is built on this simple principle. The profile has to be an accurate description of the color space it represents. The source (document) profile describes the source color space, the destination (print) profile describes the destination color space. Both descriptions have to be correct for this to work.

An incorrect profile, be it corrupt, defective or just plain wrong, will invalidate the whole process, and the result comes out wrong.

As I've mentioned a couple of times, a large part of troubleshooting is to reduce the number of variables. This is where you start.

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 15, 2018

Hi Dave,

Thanks for your input, I've attached the screenshots, they don't change as far as I'm aware between printing small and large but maybe I'm missing something. I've also tried this using both the Hahnmule profile and AdobeRGB and also sRGB.

Thanks

PJ

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 15, 2018

Thanks for your feedback.

The photo is actually from a DSLR, granted it's an old one but still, it was processed from a 10mp RAW file, some of the extra grain was from additional grain added in Lightroom. Am I correct in saying that I have to convert the ProPhoto RGB in the edit menu? I have tried printing in both sRGB and Adobe RGB and the results are both ideal when I've printed my small test print. It's only when I try printing the same image as an 18x12 the colour shift occurs and I haven't changed the settings so I'm baffled as to why this occurs?

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 15, 2018

Yes, just Edit > Convert to Profile. You need to flatten first if you have adjustment layers. I'd flatten before printing anyway, as I said, just to reduce variables.

The most reliable result should be to let Photoshop manage color, keep the file in Adobe RGB or ProPhoto, and pick the paper profile as appropriate.

Check that nothing changes in the printer driver settings as you change size. You must have the correct media type selected here as well as in the PS print dialog.

Other than that - I can't see any explanation for this.

PJ Rankin
PJ RankinAuthor
Participating Frequently
June 15, 2018

Thanks for the extra info. Like I mentioned, I've tried various methods of managing the colour, but keeping the settings the same when photoshop manages colour and only increasing the print size should not account for the dramatic colour shift due to the print size, I'm completely stumped. Thanks for your input.

D Fosse
Community Expert
Community Expert
June 15, 2018

The one thing that strikes me here is that this appears to be an extremely grainy image. If the grain structure is different in the three channels, which it often is with phones and other simple cameras, you may see resampling artifacts if you're printing with adjustment layers.

Just to reduce the number of variables, flatten the file and resample each to correct size.

Also try to print from Adobe RGB. ProPhoto is very prone to errors in the color management chain because of the huge gamut.

That's all I can think of...