Re: Subject: Re:Null Profile
Re: Subject: Re:Null Profile
- Subject: Re: Subject: Re:Null Profile
- From: Scott Martin <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 21 Mar 2012 08:16:50 -0500
Wide gamut printing for spot with simultanious process 4C simulation sounds pretty standard to me in a press proofing environment.
Generally speaking, demanding clients are the most desirable, IMO. Or at least, taking that attitude is healthy. Have fun with this!
Scott Martin
www.on-sight.com
On Mar 20, 2012, at 10:50 PM, Randy Zaucha <email@hidden> wrote:
> Hi All,Thanks for the replies.First off, I was not able to get to the edge of the new printer's gamut with just the EFI RGB driver. Then I tried creating a media setting as a simulation of Adobe RGB which is what the client files are mostly in. The results were still not as wide a gamut as printing through a postscript driver without a profile to an older dye ink printer.
> Then I set the simulation for a much larger gamut...Prophoto RGB. Add an Absolute rendering intent and the output gamut through the EFI Rip expanded past the gamut of a non-profiled printer. (except for cyans)
> Quite a surprise, but for packaging designers, the extra gamut is a real treat.
> Now they want a Gracol simulation for process colors, but also accurate Spot color simulation at the same time. Very demanding client, no?
> Randy Zaucha
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