Despite asking CS2 to colour manage, turn off printer management, setting printer profile to the correct type of canon paper I am using, I am getting a red cast
Any ideas any one?
Thanks
MartinL Mostly Lurking 12 posts Joined Dec 2005 More info | Feb 04, 2006 10:44 | #1 Despite asking CS2 to colour manage, turn off printer management, setting printer profile to the correct type of canon paper I am using, I am getting a red cast
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stupot Goldmember 2,227 posts Joined Dec 2005 Location: UK, Portsmouth Uni / HW Bucks More info | Feb 04, 2006 10:47 | #2 are your cartridgesw full/clean? Canon EOS 350D, Sigma 10-20 f4-5.6, 24-105 f4L IS, 70-200 f4L, 300 f4L IS, Kenko 1.4x pro300, 430EX, Apple Powerbook G4
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Feb 04, 2006 11:11 | #3 absolutely - also checked they are in the correct position!!
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DavidW Goldmember 3,165 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Bedfordshire, UK More info | Feb 04, 2006 11:35 | #4 This article
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Feb 04, 2006 11:41 | #5 Thanks - the monitor has been calibrated using Adobe gamma & not just using the single gamma view ie for red, green & blue. I am using a CRT.
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vjack Goldmember 1,602 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Mississippi, USA More info | I get this red case with the Pixma 4200 when using the settings in the article DavidW posted. The trick seems to be to do some careful color correction in PS for those photos that I plan to print. Printing will bring out the red, so correct for this in your post-processing. BTW, I callibrate my monitor with a Spyder, and this doesn't fix the red cast when printing.
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Thanks Jack - interesting to know about spyder2
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vjack Goldmember 1,602 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Mississippi, USA More info | MartinL wrote: Thanks Jack - interesting to know about spyder2 What have you found to be the best settings for correction in CS2 (incidentally also had the same problem in Elements 3 befor upgrading) It will be somewhat different for each picture, based on the pre-existing red. However, my starting point is always to set the white, black, and grey points in Curves. For some photos, that is enough. If there is a visible color case in PS, I'll go to Match Color and check Neutralize. As a last resort, there are always the Hue or Color Balance sliders.
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Feb 04, 2006 12:19 | #9 Thanks for your help - will go away & try
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DavidW Goldmember 3,165 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Bedfordshire, UK More info | Feb 04, 2006 12:51 | #10 Adobe Gamma is better than nothing - colorimeter based calibration is better, but involves expenditure. Hopefully you're close enough - unless you have something like a Gretag Macbeth ColorChecker to hand (something I'm realising the value of over time enough to be prepared to buy one), there's no really any easy way of judging. The quality of such a comparison depends on the illumination on the ColorChecker or similar.
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crn3371 Cream of the Crop 7,198 posts Likes: 2 Joined Mar 2005 Location: SoCal, USA More info | Feb 04, 2006 15:06 | #11 Using Adobe gamma, and following the steps outlined @Steve's digicams, I'm getting prints from my ip8500 that are so close to my monitor that I haven't had the need for a colorimeter. I'm printing from PSE3, but I've got to assume that CS2 shouldn't be much different. Make sure your monitor has had a good hour or so to warm up before running any calibration, and keep the lighting at your workspace consistant. Good luck. Sometimes we get lucky with prints matching our monitors, sometimes it takes a lot of ink, paper, and trial and error to get it right.
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Feb 07, 2006 16:05 | #12 thanks for the replies and support
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vjack Goldmember 1,602 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Mississippi, USA More info | I've never had to reduce the red in the printer settings - doing it in PS always takes care of the problem. I wonder if something is off with your printer settings?
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Feb 08, 2006 01:16 | #14 VJack - this sounds plausable - how do I check the printer settings? when I open printer properties I switch the colour adjustment to manual and print type to none so as to let PS control colour management
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vjack Goldmember 1,602 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Mississippi, USA More info | On my way to work now. As soon as I get some free time at home, I'll print a photo after walking through all my usual steps and taking notes on what I do. While it is possible that there is something wrong with your printer, I am guessing that there is a step somewhere that I'm forgetting about that might make a difference. In the meantime, make sure your settings look like those in my post here: https://photography-on-the.net …hp?t=69463&highlight=4200
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