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erfus
Newbie to Printing
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I'll have to read a bit more documentation on that, unfortunately I'm a bit restricted on time at the moment.
Just a few thoughts:
Almost every guide out there uses some profile with the -S flag, including torger's famous guide. But I don't really understand why you want to map the gamut of a supplied profile to the gamut of the printer. What we want is to map the gamut of the actual picture to the gamut of the printer, and not it's theoretical maximum gamut, right?
That also explains why with every bigger color space (sRGB -> AdobeRGB -> ProPhoto RGB) the image get's flatter.
//edit: Unfortunatly it seems all my posts require moderator approval, which kind of messes with the chronology of this thread, sorry about that.
			
			Just a few thoughts:
I think you are on the right track here, although that should be confirmable with documentation.It now looks to me that providing a profile to colprof creates B2A tables for perceptual and saturation which map the whole gamut of the supplied profile into the gamut of the printer.
Almost every guide out there uses some profile with the -S flag, including torger's famous guide. But I don't really understand why you want to map the gamut of a supplied profile to the gamut of the printer. What we want is to map the gamut of the actual picture to the gamut of the printer, and not it's theoretical maximum gamut, right?
That also explains why with every bigger color space (sRGB -> AdobeRGB -> ProPhoto RGB) the image get's flatter.
I did a quick test without specifying a profile (= removing the -S flag), which gives me yet another output with perceptual rendering. Colors look strong (similar to sRGB), but with a yellowish tint. Have to look a bit deeper into that.For the OP I suggest you forget about specifying a profile to colprof and as long as you are using 16 bits use profoto or AdobeRGB profiles for you printed images.
Difference between sRGB and AdobeRGB can definitly be seen, most difference is between sRGB and ProPhoto RGB which maps with the theory above.Maybe I should give it try to use the sRGB color space as the target space when generating my profiles and see what happens in the perceptual intent when printing
//edit: Unfortunatly it seems all my posts require moderator approval, which kind of messes with the chronology of this thread, sorry about that.
			
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