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Hi there! I'm super new to printing and I have much to learn!
I am getting very inconsistent prints from my Epson SureColor P600. Some of them are vibrant and saturated, some are very dull. When they're dull, the print dialog box also shows dull colors in the preview, but I cannot figure out what settings to change.
I think I need to change the source profile so I can use PS for color management.
(The color preview in this screenshot looks accurate)
But if I go to change the profile off of the Velvet Fine Art profile, the colors are wild & oversaturated:
Any thoughts? I've tried uninstalling and reinstalling PS and resetting the default settings but I can't figure out what to do.
I'm on a Mac: Catalina 10.14.4
Photoshop CC v21.2
Thanks so much - looking forward to the day that some of this starts to make sense!
Hi
The document profile should be a document colour space such a sRGB or Adobe RGB or Pro Photo. Never assign a monitor or a printer profile to the document. You are defeating colour management by doing so.
In simple terms - the monitor profile in your operating system should describe your monitor.
The document profile should describe the colour space for your document.
The printer profile should describe the printer/ink and paper combination you are using.
Colour Management simple explanati
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Hi
The document profile should be a document colour space such a sRGB or Adobe RGB or Pro Photo. Never assign a monitor or a printer profile to the document. You are defeating colour management by doing so.
In simple terms - the monitor profile in your operating system should describe your monitor.
The document profile should describe the colour space for your document.
The printer profile should describe the printer/ink and paper combination you are using.
Colour Management simple explanation
Digital images are made up of numbers. In RGB mode, each pixel has a number representing Red, a number representing Green and a Number representing Blue. The problem comes in that different devices can be sent those same numbers but will show different colours. To see a demonstration of this, walk into your local T.V. shop and look at the different coloured pictures – all from the same material.
To ensure the output device is showing the correct colours then a colour management system needs to know two things.
1. What colours do the numbers in the document represent?
This is the job of the document profile which describes the exact colour to be shown when Red=255 and what colour of white is meant when Red=255, Green = 255 and Blue =255. It also describes how the intermediate values move from 0 through to 255 – known as the tone response curve (or sometimes “gamma”).
Examples of colour spaces are (Adobe RGB1998, sRGB IEC61966-2.1)
With the information from the document profile, the colour management system knows what colour is actually represented by the pixel values in the document.
So what can go wrong :
Colour management is simple to use provided the document profile is correct, always save or export with an embedded profile, and the monitor/printer profile is correct. All the math is done in the background.
I hope that helps
Dave
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Hi
The profile associated with an image file provides Photoshop with information about the visually related meaning of the colour values.
Here is some reading on ICC profiles and how they work for you to provide accurate colour through the digital workflow: https://www.colourmanagement.net/advice/about-icc-colour-profiles/
Unless you are very confident that an image has the had wrong ICC profile assigned (it looks like yours do now if you assigned the SC-P600 profile) then 'assign profile' should not be used.
Your upper screen-shot of the print dialog shows 'document profile' as a printer profile, if you achieved that by using 'assign profile' then that’s a mistake.
How did your image (document) come to have the printer profile assigned to it?
What we need is for the document to be converted beteween its original colour space (maybe sRGB in your case?) and the printer profile for your Epson SC-P600 and the loaded paper stock. The printer dialog [with 'photoshop manages color' selected] does that for you if you get the settings right.
To get decent accurate printing from your Epson you need an "output" or printer ICC profile for the actual paper you're printing on.
I hope this helps
if so, please "like" my reply and if you're OK now, please mark it as "correct", so that others who have similar issues can see the solution
thanks
neil barstow, colourmanagement.net :: adobe forum volunteer
[please do not use the reply button on a message within the thread, only use the blue reply button at the top of the page, this maintains the original thread title and chronological order of posts]
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Outstanding - thank you so much! I ended up just saving another print file from my design file because I'd messed with it too much. This was very thorough & digestible - much appreciated!
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Hi, read the responses but I can't see how that advises how to change the source file.
I have applied a colour management profile using colour monkey, set up the printer (canon ix500 series) as instructed however to use photoshop to print looks like the source file needs to be RGB.
I can't see any way to get the source to RGB, currently sRGB.
Lots of printing issues at the moment trying to get windows, printer, screen and software to match up to replicate what I see on the screen.
As far as I can tell I have the screen and printer set up with the same profile, turned off the colour management in the printer driver. Now trying to set up photoshop.
I know it can get complicated but need some extra help to nail it. Thanks
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You don't change the source .Nor should you ever have the printer and screen set to the same profile. A monitor profile, a document profile and a printer profile have different jobs to do. Each describes the behaviour of the monitor. the document or printer.
There is no generic RGB. The source file in RGB will have a document colour profile which could be sRGB, Adobe RGB, ProPhoto etc. As long as the monitor has a profile that correctly describes the monitor, the document does have a profile that describes the document colour space, and the printer is also set up with a profile that represents the particular printer , paper and ink then all the conversion happens in the background.
You do though need to set Photoshop to manage colors (in the print dialogue) and set the printer to use the correct printer profile. in print settings make sure the correct media is selected and turn colour management in the printer off. That last step is to ensure you are not managing the colour conversion twice.
Dave
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Hi chrisb, your terminology here is confusing, sorry.
you wrote:
how to change the source file
In what way do you want to change the source file [you mean the image file I guess]?
I'm not sure you should change it BUT if you mean you'd like to change the ICC profile AND there's a good reason to change the colour profile then that is done in Photoshop's Edit/Convert to profile.
It's very rarely necessary to do this [unless, say your image files are going out to a print service who require a certain image colour space]
[Note - the Assign profile option is almost never the right thing to do, it just changes the interpretation, not the image data]
I have applied a colour management profile
what do you mean by that?
please expand, Photoshop has no "apply" option.
Is the profile you mention here a printer or a display screen profile?
the source file needs to be RGB
hard to know what you mmean here - if your file has the sRGB profile embedded, then it IS RGB.
Photoshop's print pathway options
[Photoshop manages color, with a good print profile selected, print driver colourmanagement disabed and the right media type selected by name]
or
[Printer manages color, with the right media option selected]
will handle conversion of your image file from (image colourspace) sRGB to "printerRGB" just fine.
This process does not require images to be within a certain RGB colourspace.
Here is some reading on ICC profiles and how they work for you to provide accurate colour through the digital workflow: https://www.colourmanagement.net/advice/about-icc-colour-profiles/
I hope this helps
thanks
neil barstow, colourmanagement.net :: adobe forum volunteer
[please do not use the reply button on a message within the thread, only use the blue reply button at the top of the page, this maintains the original thread title and chronological order of posts]
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Left image is a screenshot of the image in Photoshop (correct coloration) the right image is the export from Photoshop (red and icky). Any suggestions on how I get an export to look like the image on the left?
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Hi, is it possible that your 'exported'** image is being viewed in a non-colour managed application program (there are many and they are not much use TBH) e.g. many versions of the Windows 'Photos' program?
Of course, your image saved from Photoshop also needs an embedded icc profile
(so that another colour management savvy application program can get the info it needs to display properly).
In 'save as' see the option to embed the icc profile in the save as dialog.
Then you need to view it in a colour managed application program. That way the appearance should match Photoshop's
**BTW why use "export" when 'save' or 'save as' can do the job?
I hope this helps
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