I'm using Vmware Workstation on Windows XP. It's a commercial product and sets up a virtual computer that acts like a regular computer in every way. It's very stable and I have no problem running Redhat Linux in a window on my desktop, it acts like a separate computer on the network with it's own IP address and everything. I allocated the USB port in my 2100 to VMware while Windows uses the Firewire port so I can print using both operating systems without any further changes. Currently I'm using GIMP itself, but realize that it doesn't support CMYK files, so I was planning to try outputting postscript directly from photoshop to a file and printing from that. Unfortunately I'm not yet familiar with the command-line syntax for CUPS and Gimp-Print, and there's no good examples in the documentation, so I expect to struggle a little bit before figuring everything out. The method you're describing sounds very useful for what I'm trying to achieve, thanks! I'll let you know when I get it to work... --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@yahoogroups.com, John Labovitz <johnl@j...> wrote: > On 1/1/03 8:43 PM, "danielstaver <daniel@p...>" > <daniel@p...> wrote: > > > After spending the whole night installing Red-Hat linux on a virtual > > machine (I normally use windows) and compiling various packages to > > get Gimp-Print to work I finally got to try how it would do BW > > printing on the 2100. > > Wow, that's dedication! I'm curious -- is the virtual machine a commercial > product, or something that's free? > > Exactly how are you getting the image to gimp-print? Through Gimp itself? > > > What I would like to do now is to somehow get Gimp-Print to print > > using only the two blacks, but tint the image with one additional > > colour. The Epson blacks are pretty warm, so I'd like to add a small > > amount of cyan to get a more neutral image. I would be grateful if > > someone with more experience with Gimp-Print could guide me in the > > right direction on how to do this. > > You might be able to do this by sending a CMYK file to gimp-print. If you > use the "Raw CMYK" output mode, you can control each of the main ink colors > separately. Note that gimp-print still handles the light-regular crossover, > so it's not truly a raw mode, but it's closer than sending RGB. > > Anyway, if you set up a Photoshop file to be CMYK, but have your main image > as grayscale on the K channel, and the "toning" on the C channel, you might > be able to make this work. > > Try this: > > - open your grayscale file (and do a Save As just in case!) > > - convert to multichannel mode > > - go to the Channels palette > > - duplicate the "Black" channel three times > > - convert to CMYK mode > > - select each of the M and Y channels in turn, and erase their contents > (I use command-backspace on my Mac) > > - tune the C channel as desired (using Levels or Curves) > > - print, making sure you specify "Raw CMYK" in the gimp-print settings > > -- > John Labovitz > johnl@j... > www.johnlabovitz.com
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Re: [Digital BW] BW printing on the 2100/2200 using Gimp-Print
2003-01-02 by danielstaver <daniel@petraflux.com>
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