David, I know that the lab advises doing that "Convert to Profile". To me, it adds an unnecessary step. I have also found a difference in the prints with those three different ways to print that were mentioned by Todd earlier in this thread. I stuck up some screengrabs of my Print Dialogue Box, and the Advanced Settings box: http://marktucker.com/epson/drivers.html The Media Type setting is very important. Are you sure that you have the same Media Type setting in these last "problem" prints as you did for the prints that made up the profile? I like NOT to convert to profile. I instead set the PRINT SPACE in the print dialogue box to the custom profile (in my case: Tucker 7000 ICC Profile"). For photographs, Intent should be Perceptual. My working space is ColorMatchRGB, but your's is Adobe RGB; not problem, again, as long as the prints that made up your profile was done in this exact same way. Let me know if anything else is missing. Or anyone can comment on any other approaches. Again, this is just me, and my personal way of working. I'm certainly not anywhere near a Bruce Fraser in terms of the subtleties of the different approaches. But this works very well for me in my workflow. Mark Tucker --- In DigitalBlackandWhiteThePrint@y..., daschkenas@a... wrote: > Well, things are begining to look up, after speaking with the lab > that made the profiles today, they gave me some tips that were > new to me and I will share them. > Rather than set the profile in the epson print box, they suggested > setting the profile in the Mode, convert to profile. > That made an enormous difference, in getting close to neutral, > also setting View to custom for the monitor with the new profile, > allows me to see subtle b&w adjustments on the screen. > While changing the brightness, I am seeing a pretty drastic color > shift to Cyan, the lab had not experienced this. > Any thoughts. > david
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Re: problem profiles
2001-10-05 by Mark Tucker
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