Stephen Marsh
Well-known member
Although this is not about PDF-X standards, it is similar to saying that PDF/X-4 is dead, long live PDF/X-1 :]
Stephen Marsh
Stephen Marsh
Last edited:
Although this is not about PDF-X standards, it is similar to saying that PDF/X-4 is dead, long live PDF/X-1 :]
Stephen Marsh
No I disagree, no body said you need to convert your your data to eciCMYK. Instead use PDF/X-4 and always set eciCMYK as Output Intent.
The Rip will then convert from Output Intent (eciCMYK or tagged RGB) to your destination profile.
The advantage would be that the creative Indesign user wouldn’t need to care about the other 23 different standard cmyk profiles. The same way many work today with Fogra39 but secured for any output. This way you can get full advantage of a new digital printer with a larger gamut then Fogra39.
I obviously read the ECI press release differently then.
I am not yet drinking the cool-aid. :]
Stephen Marsh
This is the way we are handling RGB today, why wouldn't it be possible to do the same with CMYK?
Magnus
Why can't we make LAB the default design colorspace instead of trying to force a CMYK or RGB?
Magnus, just because you have a deep understanding of colormanagement, color spaces and conversion between them doesn't mean that any other person down (up?) the line will have the same knowledge. Eg. designers know that RGB will change when printed, but they assume that CMYK data stays the same (=treated as DeviceCMYK). The new system – when implemented – will change that, which will cause innumerable annoyances ("my 100 percent Y got contaminated").
And no, you can't magically stretch the color defined in a smaller color space into a new, wide-gamut color space on your brand new digital device. Not without causing differences, which might get approval or rejection from the client. To make this work, you have to acquire the data in PDF/X-4 (or PDF/X-6, if we want to be sooooo advanced boys).
On another note: "it assumes that the Print Service Provider understands and has the means to perform a Devicelink conversion". DeviceLink conversion on a service provider level is a must today. No way to escape that.
The real culprit here is what Danny Whitehead raised: so the client should sign off material in a totally different color space (and media) as the intended output. This is very far from the current practice when we use two proofers just to provide Coated and Uncoated proofs to mimic the surface characteristics of the final product. I don't believe clients used to get to this system will approve a newspaper ad proofed on a 'general-use' material in a 'general-use' color space.
Why can't we make LAB the default design colorspace instead of trying to force a CMYK or RGB?
LOL That's definitely not enough — i, personally, would've vote for XYZ as working space
Me too. It is scalable. Scalability is very important when trying to make screened images that will retain colour. IMO
Yeah, go to sarcasm. We really need more sarcasm and bitterness in this industry, then it will bloom again.
That's what industry really needs. We need it to resist lot's of bullshit - like concentric screening, xm-developments, ecological yammering and ecicmyk for sure.
btw, ecirgb (v1 or v2, doesn't matter) has been around for several years. Did you find that useful?
That's what industry really needs. We need it to resist lot's of bullshit - like concentric screening, xm-developments, ecological yammering and ecicmyk for sure.
btw, ecirgb (v1 or v2, doesn't matter) has been around for several years. Did you find that useful?
If you read my first post in this thread you will see that I mentioned eciRGB (as not so successful). Please take the time to read through the posts before start bashing. I started this post to discuss the pros and cons of eciCMYK, and the workflow it would acquire.
You might wanna contribute with some of your ideas and knowledge regarding why it wouldn't work on a more technical level?
Yeah, go to sarcasm. We really need more sarcasm and bitterness in this industry, then it will bloom again.
Why can't we make LAB the default design colorspace instead of trying to force a CMYK or RGB?
Here is a link to a Wiki entry for Dan Margulis. He has taught courses and written books on colour management and covers using Lab as a way to work to edit and correct images. This might be of interest to you.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Margulis
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