bbq_roadrunner
New member
Hi,
I work at a production graphics house printing various flyers and marketing material on offset paper with a Didde web press.
Our customers are not computer savvy and generally send in there photos anywhere from professional photography to scans of polaroids shot in the 70's.
Question Is.... Since the source of these photos are so erratic, is there anyway to get the levels, lighting, ink saturation and overall print quality (not image quality obviously) to be consistent.
On more then one occasion I have had crappy photos print great and high quality images print poorly and vice versa. Is there a way to take the Photoshop values of a picture that prints great and apply them to all?? And if so what is the best route to take. Or if I'm completely off base, let me know.
I am currently using Adobe RGB (1998) / U.S. Web Uncoated v2 on all programs. Outputting files directly from InDesign or Quark to RIP.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.
I work at a production graphics house printing various flyers and marketing material on offset paper with a Didde web press.
Our customers are not computer savvy and generally send in there photos anywhere from professional photography to scans of polaroids shot in the 70's.
Question Is.... Since the source of these photos are so erratic, is there anyway to get the levels, lighting, ink saturation and overall print quality (not image quality obviously) to be consistent.
On more then one occasion I have had crappy photos print great and high quality images print poorly and vice versa. Is there a way to take the Photoshop values of a picture that prints great and apply them to all?? And if so what is the best route to take. Or if I'm completely off base, let me know.
I am currently using Adobe RGB (1998) / U.S. Web Uncoated v2 on all programs. Outputting files directly from InDesign or Quark to RIP.
Any help would be greatly appreciated.