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Re: Calibration Advice --- Hardware/software |
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  12-13-05 - 11:19 PM
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<ahall@no-spam-panix.com> wrote in message
news:kpgk6e8hi2j.fsf@panix3.panix.com...
>
> I have been struggling with monitor and printer
> calibration.
>
> Could someone recommend a unified solution ---
> something that will aid me in calibrating my
> monitor, printer and hopefully, scanner?
Monaco or Colorvision do all of those.
>
> I do not mind spending a reasonable amount
> of money (I think the good ones cost around
> $500).
>
> Good documentation is critical, as I have not
> fully grasped all the complications of color
> management. If the documentation that comes
> with the product is not all that one might ask
> for, some good web based tutorials would do.
Join the croud. Color management can be extremely frustrating.
Usually, however, the documentation is not a tutorial. For that, I suggest
"Real World Color Management" by Bruce Fraser.
>
> I have PS CS2, a Canon S9000 printer, and an Epson
> 4780 scanner. I run windows XP.
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
>
> --
> Andrew Hall
> (Now reading Usenet in comp.graphics.apps.photoshop...)
Jim
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Re: Calibration Advice --- Hardware/software |
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  12-13-05 - 11:19 PM
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On Tue, 13 Dec 2005 20:37:21 GMT, "Jim" <j.n@nospam.com> wrote:
>
><ahall@no-spam-panix.com> wrote in message
>news:kpgk6e8hi2j.fsf@panix3.panix.com...
>Monaco or Colorvision do all of those.
Monaco aint too hot for printer calibration, at least, the version I
have is not wonderful. I have EZColor Optix. It calibrates the monitor
nicely to where I get a nice neutral flat grey where it is supposed to
be grey. However, to profile a printer, you have to print their
calibration tiff and then scan it. BBBZZZZTTTTTTT. Not good. Then you
are supposed to edit the profile created with their not very intuitive
profile editor.
>Join the croud. Color management can be extremely frustrating.
>Usually, however, the documentation is not a tutorial. For that, I suggest
>"Real World Color Management" by Bruce Fraser.
thats a good book but very tedious in spots to read. I did learn some
stuff however.
gretag, thats what I would get if i had the money to spend. You get a
densitometer or calibrator hardware of some type. Print their patch
and then read the patch right into the program, no scanner required.
Not cheap tho.
http://world.i1color.com/
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Re: Calibration Advice --- Hardware/software |
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  12-13-05 - 11:19 PM
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> Andrew Hall writes ...
>
>I have been struggling with monitor and printer
>calibration.
Monitor should be easy, printer is harder (been there, done that).
>Could someone recommend a unified solution ---
>something that will aid me in calibrating my
>monitor, printer and hopefully, scanner?
My advice is to spend the $$ necessary to accurately profile your
monitor, but buy a printer with excellent built-in profiles or have
custom ones made and save your money because it's tougher to get
excellent printer profiles on your own at a reasonable cost.
>I do not mind spending a reasonable amount
>of money (I think the good ones cost around
>$500).
I think the three best monitor profile solutions are around $200 - 230
each, but I personally feel you cannot get a decent printer profile
solution for less than whatever the Eye-One spectrophotometer package
is going for, which is probably $1,200 - $1,400. The cheaper printer
profiler packages use flatbed scanners for the critical measurements
and for most all of us this isn't good enough. The ColorVision
PrintFix (or something like that) is in your price range but most
reviews of this have been luke-warm to negative.
Here are a couple of reviews of good monitor profile packages ... I've
used the Spyder (original) and recently the Gretag Eye-One, which does
much better on LCDs, and I've used the Monaco software for scanners and
printers but found the documentation obtuse and the support staff
lacking.
http://www.outbackphoto.com/color_m...m_08/essay.html
http://www.macworld.com/2005/03/rev...rator/index.php
>Good documentation is critical, as I have not
>fully grasped all the complications of color
>management.
To really learn this stuff get "Real World Color Management" by Fraser
et al.
>I have PS CS2, a Canon S9000 printer, and an Epson
>4780 scanner
>From what I hear the S9000 doesn't ship with very accurate profiles
(typical of many consumer printers, unfortunately). If you use just a
couple of papers it might be worth it to pay someone to build custom
profiles for just those papers rather than spend another grand for the
Eye-One spectrophotometer.
I personally think Epson has done a pretty good job of shipping
accurate profiles with their better Photo pigment ink printers the past
couple of years. They came out with the 9600/7600 wide format pro
printers about 3 years ago and were very embarassed when a genius
amateur (Bill Atkinson, who was one of the early software whizzes at
Apple) created very accurate profiles that were far superior to what
Epson created. Bill gave these profiles away to anyone who wanted to
download them and Epson came to him to learn how he did it and he
showed them, and subsequently the profiles they've provided are a lot
better these days. I have an Epson 4000 Pro for example with excellent
built-in profiles from Epson, and Epson also created profiles for the
2200 that were better than what were shipped earlier and better than
cusom profiles a friend was able to make for my 2200 with an Eye-One.
Of course if you use non-Epson papers you'll need to make a custom
profile or rely on what the paper vendor supplies, and these
vendor-supplied profiles are very much hit or miss.
At any rate, spend the bucks to get the monitor done right, but that's
the easy part. Just my opinion, based on several miles of rocky road
on the way to completely accurate color management :)
Bill
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Re: Calibration Advice --- Hardware/software |
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  12-13-05 - 11:19 PM
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"Bill Hilton" <bhilton665@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1134509281.110584.173000@g47g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
>
> Monitor should be easy, printer is harder (been there, done that).
>
>
> My advice is to spend the $$ necessary to accurately profile your
> monitor, but buy a printer with excellent built-in profiles or have
> custom ones made and save your money because it's tougher to get
> excellent printer profiles on your own at a reasonable cost.
>
>
> I think the three best monitor profile solutions are around $200 - 230
> each, but I personally feel you cannot get a decent printer profile
> solution for less than whatever the Eye-One spectrophotometer package
> is going for, which is probably $1,200 - $1,400. The cheaper printer
> profiler packages use flatbed scanners for the critical measurements
> and for most all of us this isn't good enough. The ColorVision
> PrintFix (or something like that) is in your price range but most
> reviews of this have been luke-warm to negative.
>
> Here are a couple of reviews of good monitor profile packages ... I've
> used the Spyder (original) and recently the Gretag Eye-One, which does
> much better on LCDs, and I've used the Monaco software for scanners and
> printers but found the documentation obtuse and the support staff
> lacking.
> http://www.outbackphoto.com/color_m...m_08/essay.html
> http://www.macworld.com/2005/03/rev...rator/index.php
>
>
> To really learn this stuff get "Real World Color Management" by Fraser
> et al.
>
>
> (typical of many consumer printers, unfortunately). If you use just a
> couple of papers it might be worth it to pay someone to build custom
> profiles for just those papers rather than spend another grand for the
> Eye-One spectrophotometer.
>
> I personally think Epson has done a pretty good job of shipping
> accurate profiles with their better Photo pigment ink printers the past
> couple of years. They came out with the 9600/7600 wide format pro
> printers about 3 years ago and were very embarassed when a genius
> amateur (Bill Atkinson, who was one of the early software whizzes at
> Apple) created very accurate profiles that were far superior to what
> Epson created. Bill gave these profiles away to anyone who wanted to
> download them and Epson came to him to learn how he did it and he
> showed them, and subsequently the profiles they've provided are a lot
> better these days. I have an Epson 4000 Pro for example with excellent
> built-in profiles from Epson, and Epson also created profiles for the
> 2200 that were better than what were shipped earlier and better than
> cusom profiles a friend was able to make for my 2200 with an Eye-One.
> Of course if you use non-Epson papers you'll need to make a custom
> profile or rely on what the paper vendor supplies, and these
> vendor-supplied profiles are very much hit or miss.
>
> At any rate, spend the bucks to get the monitor done right, but that's
> the easy part. Just my opinion, based on several miles of rocky road
> on the way to completely accurate color management :)
>
> Bill
>
Just an observation - Bill is discussing higher end products whereas I
mentioned the low end ones.
And, I do agree that the current profiles from Epson are quite good.
Jim
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Re: Calibration Advice --- Hardware/software |
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  12-14-05 - 11:14 PM
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> Andrew Hall writes ...
>
> I will take Bill's advice and get the monitor right, then
> try out the Monaco for the scanner and printer.
After you create the printer profile with Monaco I'd recommend printing
a test pattern with a black-white gradient to evaluate the profile.
The one I use was created by Bill Atkinson and he has made it available
as a free download (let me know if you want a link) ... here's a
version of it (which you can't use because it's a small jpeg, you
should get the original) to show what I mean ... I use it for profile
evaluation and look carefully at the skin tones and colors I care most
about for landscape photography, like the aspens and the red rocks and
sky, but first I check the gradient at the bottom (left on this rotated
image) ... bad profiles will stay black and/or white for a while and
then make an abrupt jump to the gradient (indicating limited tonal
range), or more commonly there will be a green or sometimes magenta
cast in say 25% of the gradient, a sign the profile isn't properly gray
balanced thru the whole tonal range. The dye ink printers like the
Epson 1280 are especially hard to gray balance, I've found, but even
some custom vendor-supplied profiles for the 4000 Pro and pricey custom
art papers often have this problem, since they skimped on paying for
good accurate profiles ...
http://members.aol.com/bhilton665/a...n_test_file.jpg
> If that does not work, perhaps I will give the printer to a
> relative and buy an Epson :)
Look around for a site that offers custom test prints from various
printers/papers and maybe buy a couple of prints and print the same
pattern on your S9000 and compare side-by-side before shelling out for
a new printer ... the S9000 is a good dye ink printer, similar to the
Epson 1280, which I still own (though it doesn't get much use). When
the Epson pigment printers first came out I ordered test prints from a
2000p and felt I was better off keeping the 1280 because of the colors,
but when I got 2200 test prints I felt it was time to change. There is
no substitute for having prints of the same file in hand and doing a
side-by-side comparison. The S9000 you have is a pretty good printer
so make sure you have good reason to switch to Epson :)
Bill
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