Re: Soft Proofing with White Border
Re: Soft Proofing with White Border
- Subject: Re: Soft Proofing with White Border
- From: John Castronovo <email@hidden>
- Date: Tue, 03 Sep 2013 15:56:07 -0400
- Importance: Normal
I can't supply a link to a reference for it, but I can say from personal
experience that it works well. Without it, our vision tends to adjust such
that an image that's too dark appears correct. I don't know what Adobe was
thinking when they defaulted to a dark screen in the last versions which
only makes matters worse. A white border represents something like a paper
white reference so it establishes a baseline guide for brightness.
-----Original Message-----
From: Ken Fleisher
Sent: Tuesday, September 03, 2013 3:27 PM
To: ColorSync Users Mailing List
Subject: Soft Proofing with White Border
It is recommended that when you soft proof an image on screen compared to a
print on white paper (or predicting the print on white paper), that you
have a minimum 1" white border surrounding the image on screen. Does anyone
know of a good link to a (preferably) non-profit web site that explains in
plain English why this is necessary? I need to supply a good reference for
it and the link I had been using has gone dead.
Thanks!
Ken Fleisher
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