Andrew
>Paper White! Now that isn't to say the profile is 'correct' (we'd have to do some measurements) or your display white point isn't nailed but the profile predicts a warm paper white.
TonyW
>This may indeed be the case for the individual user and if I was to think of a reason or two why this should happen my thoughts would first stray to the validity of monitor calibration and then the quality/accuracy of the ICC profile for a particular paper and viewing/lighting conditions for the print.
Hm. How could I know the validity of my monitor calibration? There is an option to validate the profile, using the same software that created it, so how is the validation of this validation? Andrew has earlier called it a 'Feel-good-button'. How can I check the white point of the monitor profile?
Viewing conditions for the print: I have calibrated the monitor to D50 and have established D50 roomlight not Solux but Yuji,
https://store.yujiintl.com/collections/high-cri-led-lights/products/bc-series-a60-high-cri-remote-phosphor-led-bulb-unit-2-pcs?variant=27740384775
even though not enough of it.
The print looks rather yellow/brown, like it had spent to much time in the fixation bath. I'll try to simulate the amount on screen when I'm back home in some days, I'm on the road right now.
The paper in question is Epson Premium Glossy. It does contain OBAs, not sure how much of them.
I have some Epson Prem. Glossy. It doesn't have OBAs on the print surface but the substrate is fairly fluorescent. The paper I have is just barely bluish w/o uV, Lab=95,-1,-1 (M2) and only slightly more, Lab=95,0,-3, with D50 (M1).
Not sure what you mean by prints being yellowish. Does the unprinted paper appear yellowish? One way to compare to a good white is to get a roll of plumber's PTFE tape. It's very cheap stuff and really thin designed to seal pipe threads but has a matte surface and but reflects light evenly and is spectrally flat. Lay a piece of across unprinted paper to see what kind of tint a paper has.
You can rough check the paper's profile for this sort of "tint" by printing a colorchecker (download from babelcolor) using Absolute Colorimetric intent. The print should match a colorchecker quite well when viewed in daylight. If not, you have a profile/printer/paper or settings mismatch.
As for "show paper white" the paper is fairly neutral with only a small amount of fluorescence but with a very slight blue shift. So you should also see a very slight blue shift with "show paper white." However, you will most likely notice the much larger luminance decrease because the L*=95 is a significant drop from pure white.