Hi Rufus
The Adobe Color Print Utility would print with no transform, but, then you don't get to choose RelCol or AbsCol which seems to be what you are after.
In theory your method of "working in printer colourspace" - ( either that or just assign printer ICC to the file before printing) that might work, we call it a null transform.
Or, say your original's Adobe RGB, then select the same colourspace (Adobe RGB) as printer profile. That should work too.
But we could help better if we knew why you are trying to do this?
Also you write:
"I made up a digital copy of an x-rite CCP, using RGB values.
I then removed the brightest white patch, by making it transparent, and de-saturated the colours until they were all within gamut of my printer/paper combination."
whats a CCP?
Did you use gamut warning to check that all colours were within destination gamut?’
I don't think thats a definitive indication of "fit"
Although it's commonly thought to fulfil that need, what gamut warning actually reveals is areas of an original which will move by a certain delta E when being converted to the destination profile. So something "just" out of gamut would not show up.
Also - gamut warning, in my experience, is not at all good at showing dark or light "out of gamut" colours - it only seems to show colours around mid-range. And example, dark suntanned skin, maybe oiled for the beach, gamut warning is OK but convert to printer ICC and the areas approaching shadow may lose colour, so instead of dark brown they are printed as grey. With a 32D gamut mapper like thew wonderful Colorthink its easy to see whats happening here, the area is moving UP inn the colourspace (lighter) rather than towards the centre (less saturated)
There are 4 ways to check whether its in gamut that I can think of right now, there may be others:
1: Use Colorthink from Chromix, map the image pixels in 3D Lab against the destination colourspace gamut boundary
(Colorthink can even create vectors to show the start and end point for each mapped pixel going thorough an ICC-ICC transform)
2: Look at the Photoshop levels histogram before and after, any clipping? this tends to illustrate "out of gamut" properly.
3: (this only works for colour patches not images which would be impractical) - convert to the output colourspace and compare all the patch values, tedious I know. makes Colorthink look extremely good value.
4: you already thought of this one, create the patches in printer colourspace.
I hope this helps
if so, please do mark my reply as "helpful" and if you're OK now, please mark it as "correct" below, so others who have similar issues can see the solution
thanks
neil barstow, colourmanagement