Re: (no subject)
Re: (no subject)
- Subject: Re: (no subject)
- From: bruce fraser <email@hidden>
- Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2003 15:31:58 -0800
For heaven's sake, people! Profiles don't produce casts of any
shade-they just generate numbers. The color reproduced by sending
those numbers to a device depends on the behavior of the device.
That's why we needed color management in the first place. If the
device is actually behaving the way the profile data says it's
behaving, you won't get casts. If it isn't, you will.
It's possible and occasionally desirable to tune the perceptual
rendering tables for a specific input profile, but other than that,
the input profile makes zero difference to the output in a
properly-configured workflow.
At 11:26 AM +0100 12/5/03, Daniel Metz wrote:
martin Orpen wrote
The *limited extent* to which I referred was the fact that Euroscale v2
only
seems to produce a passable separation when fed data from AdobeRGB1998.
I am not sure that the RGB profile has anything to do with the fact
that Euroscale V2 produce passable separations. For printing
destination, the only one problem of the RGB sources can be the loss of
saturated color like pure cyan. If You do the test with sRGB, ECI RGB
or other one, the "Adobe" Euroscale coated give always the same green
cast.
--
Daniel Metz
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| >(no subject) (From: Daniel Metz <email@hidden>) |