Luminous Landscape Forum
Raw & Post Processing, Printing => Colour Management => Topic started by: GeoffM on September 09, 2012, 05:56:34 pm
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I just created a set of profiles for Epson Premium Lustre 260 on my 7900. I used a 2400 patch set, and created D50 and D65 Colorful and Saturation profiles using iProfiler (1.3.2).
The profiles look OK when I view them in PM5 gamut view against the Epson supplied profile (the iProfile profile has better gamut in the reds and blues), but when I use any of the iProfiler profiles in Lightroom or Photoshop, any areas near black (pretty much anything less than about 6% RGB in Lightroom) are turning a strange shade of light blue. This happens with both Relative and Perceptual settings. I've verified color management is off in the printer driver and using the Epson profile I don't have the problem - it only happens with the iProfiler versions. Soft-proofing with the iProfiler profiles in LR or Photoshop looks normal - no problems at all in the black areas.
Any thoughts on how to troubleshoot this, or what I may have done wrong?
Thanks,
Geoff
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I had this great idea about printing the image out of LR to a file so I could show everyone what the "bad" profile looked like, and guess what? The file looked fine. It was only messed up when I actually printed the image. So I checked and, you guessed it, 100% clogged PK nozzle. Mystery solved.
Sigh. Sometimes it's the simple stuff that bites you.
Geoff
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I had this great idea about printing the image out of LR to a file so I could show everyone what the "bad" profile looked like, and guess what? The file looked fine. It was only messed up when I actually printed the image. So I checked and, you guessed it, 100% clogged PK nozzle. Mystery solved.
Sigh. Sometimes it's the simple stuff that bites you.
Geoff
I'd just like to add an important information. Sometimes when I leave the printer off for some days, specially in those periods of low humidity (afternoons of 30% or less), even when nozzle tests show everything 100% ok, it's possible to see some color cast. Fortunately, a single cleaning cycle is enough to recover the profiled color balance.