Greetings,
(Please see the attached pictures for reference...)
I've noticed, but never dwelt on, the idea of using the Color Management tab of a print driver's Properties window to set custom CMYK and RGB ICC profiles... until yesterday.
When one faces a smaller digital printer without a serious DFE, one could have the idea of profiling the device and using that Color Management tab to assign profiles.
Sounds nice, doesn't it?
You could, in theory, have the printer profiled for a number of stocks and enable non Adobe users to use the correct profile.
This spawns out of a practical need I'm facing at the moment, thus why I'm here after a few hours of research, and failure.
So, in this Color Management tab, I've set an RGB profile (ProPhoto RGB ~ just to easily see the difference / if its working or not) and a CMYK profile. The CMYK profile, as attached here, is on crack cocaine intentionally: I need to easily see if the profile is used or not.
When printing from Acrobat with the print driver that has those two unusual ICC profile attached to it, I see in the results (see before.png and after.png files attached herein) indicate that though my pdf contains a tiff image, the ProPhoto RGB profile seems to have been used to convert colors... as if Windows first converts everything to RGB and then use whatever RGB profile is available.
Without any profiles attached to the color management tab of the print driver:
With the profiles attached:
Is this normal expected behaviour? Would anyone have a good reference on how color management works in Windows?
Thank you for your time, and a pleasant weekend to all.
Shaare
(Please see the attached pictures for reference...)
I've noticed, but never dwelt on, the idea of using the Color Management tab of a print driver's Properties window to set custom CMYK and RGB ICC profiles... until yesterday.
When one faces a smaller digital printer without a serious DFE, one could have the idea of profiling the device and using that Color Management tab to assign profiles.
Sounds nice, doesn't it?
You could, in theory, have the printer profiled for a number of stocks and enable non Adobe users to use the correct profile.
This spawns out of a practical need I'm facing at the moment, thus why I'm here after a few hours of research, and failure.
So, in this Color Management tab, I've set an RGB profile (ProPhoto RGB ~ just to easily see the difference / if its working or not) and a CMYK profile. The CMYK profile, as attached here, is on crack cocaine intentionally: I need to easily see if the profile is used or not.
When printing from Acrobat with the print driver that has those two unusual ICC profile attached to it, I see in the results (see before.png and after.png files attached herein) indicate that though my pdf contains a tiff image, the ProPhoto RGB profile seems to have been used to convert colors... as if Windows first converts everything to RGB and then use whatever RGB profile is available.
Without any profiles attached to the color management tab of the print driver:
With the profiles attached:
Is this normal expected behaviour? Would anyone have a good reference on how color management works in Windows?
Thank you for your time, and a pleasant weekend to all.
Shaare
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