- Epson R200/R300 greyscale/black and white printing?
- Posted by Si on December 8th, 2004
Hi,
Anyone found the best combo of paper and settings to get as close to a B+W
print with the R200?
If I print straight onto Premium Glossy, I see a magenta cast - easy to dial
in -5%M, but then you are left with a green cast.
Si.
- Posted by John on December 8th, 2004
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 01:05:00 -0000, Si wrote:
I was having the same problem using Epson paper, changed to "PrinArt"
for Black and White prints.
- Posted by Hecate on December 8th, 2004
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 01:05:00 -0000, "Si" <insert@addresshere.co.uk>
wrote:
you're double managing colour, or not colour managing at all.
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- Posted by Si on December 8th, 2004
"Hecate" <hecate@newsguy.com> wrote in message
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Expand on that then please.....
Si.
- Posted by Hecate on December 9th, 2004
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 17:10:45 -0000, "Si" <insert@addresshere.co.uk>
wrote:
Photoshop, and set up colour management in the program, then allow the
printer to colour manage as well, you'll get a colour shift.
Conversely, if you do no colour management in software and allow the
printer to "do what it thinks" then you're also quite likely to get a
colour shift simply because you're allowing the printer to handle the
RGB/CMYK conversion without first checking that the RGB version is
suitable. Where you print in b&w, the printer will use colour inks -
you'll get a colour cast because the printer is "deciding" how to
convert the tones between true black and true white.
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Hecate - The Real One
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- Posted by Si on December 10th, 2004
"Hecate" <hecate@newsguy.com> wrote in message
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I'm using Photoshop 5.0
Coverted the image to Greyscale - printing using Greyscale as the colour
space - making no adjustments during printing - so where am I going wrong?
Si.
- Posted by Hecate on December 11th, 2004
On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 16:10:57 -0000, "Si" <insert@addresshere.co.uk>
wrote:
remember what is and isn't in PS 5. However, the best way to ensure
that doesn't happen is to control colour management. I.e. use Gamma
first, if that's all you have. Soft proof the image. (See the manual
for both things) And first of all, don't use convert to grayscale if
you can avoid it. I can't remember if Channel Mixer was available
then, but it's a much better way to turn colour into B&W and gives you
far more control than the set 3:6:1 (R:G:B) conversion.
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Hecate - The Real One
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- Posted by Si on December 11th, 2004
"Hecate" <hecate@newsguy.com> wrote in message
news
4jkr0hm8df1vp9q90s46gs9dti3qfenb5@4ax.com...
I'll have a read up - I'm using Image -> Mode -> Greyscale at the moment -
perhaps as you say, not the best.
Si.
- Posted by Hecate on December 13th, 2004
On Sat, 11 Dec 2004 12:19:36 -0000, "Si" <insert@addresshere.co.uk>
wrote:
say a complete range of Zone System tones, it'll give you a reasonable
result. For anything more challenging you'll end with a less than
optimal result.
--
Hecate - The Real One
Hecate@newsguy.com
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