> From: awahlster [mailto:awahlster@...] > > Digtial Light and Color offers a couple ofsoftware hardware packages > called: > > Profile Mechanic - Monitor for $180.00 it has the spider and will do > my monitor > > Profile Mechanic - Scanner For $60.00 that will do the same for my > Scanners if I buy a $80.00 target package. > > They offer nothing for the printers. > > Monaco Systems Inc. has a couple of package setups like the: > > MonacoEZcolor 2.6 Color Management Software $200.00 > > This says it will do the monitor scanner and printer all to the same > std. it looks like I would still need 35mm targets to make it work > though it does include a reflective target for my flat bed. > > Monaco has other offerings as well. > > Color vision offers so many choices I'm totally lost looking at them. > > I'm just a Dump Truck driver who enjoys photography wants to print his > own stuff at home and I don't want to become a color calibration > reviewer in the process. It will be hard enough just learning to use > what I have already I really don't want a bunch of more head aches. > > Also just to make this short PLEASE don't tell me I should be using > Photoshop, or any other editing program or scanner driver or anything > the items listed above are what i'm going to be using until I wear > them out. > > And while I know you will probably be right I should not scrimp on the > color calibration stuff I just don't have the money for some $1000.00 > Pro set up. And if I did I still wouldn't spend it that way. > > SO any help or am I beyond help. My advice is get a really good monitor calibrator like the GretagMacbeth Eye-One Display, and forget about calibrating anything else initially. First of all, for your printer, you're unlikely to be able to produce better profiles with inexpensive tools than you can get from other people who have high-end tools, so don't bother trying. I don't know about Canon, but my experience with stock Epson profiles (on the 2200) are that they're very good. Second of all, for your scanner (or for that matter, a digital camera, if you get one), calibrating and profiling is less important because it's an input device, so you get to edit the images from it before you use them. Indeed, you're likely to want to do that anyway, even if the scanner produces technically accurate color. Tweaking images to make up for deficiencies in a scanner or digicam's color rendition may seem like a pain, but it's actually comparatively easy, compared to the sort of tweaking involved in correcting for poor screen/print matching. The latter is difficult because you're not trying to make the image look a certain way, you're trying to make the image have the opposite flaws of the initial test print: if the test looked magenta in the midtones, you have to guess aout how green to make it to compensate. Ugh. However, the reason people have poor screen/print matching is 95% the result of having an uncalibrated monitor. If you have good printer profiles, which you probably already do, and you get a good monitor calibration and profiling package, you'll get good results, maybe not perfect down to a gnat's ass, but very close. -- Ciao, Paul D. DeRocco Paul mailto:pderocco@...
Message
RE: [Digital BW] Color calibration options driving me crazy
2005-01-02 by Paul D. DeRocco
Attachments
- No local attachments were found for this message.