martin0reg
Printer Master
"Innovative new color management" for printers by using a digital camera:
..only in german so far..
http://www.colymp.com/
I made a quick test and here is my first experience:
Workflow:
- install the programm "colymProfiler" * (a free test version is available online, making prints with "white stripes")
- print the testchart out of the software with your printer
- take a photo of this print with your camera (settings neutral, manual WB on the white borders)
- save this photo and let colymp calibrate it.
The result is a calibration or printer profile for photos of this camera printed with this printer setting + ink + paper.
Now there will appear a virtual printer in your windows system called "colymPrint", you can print out of all editors.
But you can also export ICC profiles from your calibrations for use with adobe and co.
The quality of the profiles depends much on the quality of the photo of the printed test chart. Pay attention on exposure and white balance of the camera (no "vivid" or similar settings) and on neutral, uniform lighting too.
If the camera gives neutral colors, the profile could also match other cameras more or less.
You can shoot more than one photo (of the printed test chart) and use them for one profile, colymp will calculate the average.
In my opinion it is an interesting approach, if you don't have a spyder print or colormunki.
I posted a few more info's here:
http://www.dslr-forum.de/showthread.php?t=1179409&page=2
with a test photo of two prints, using canon driver settings and colymp profile:
http://forum.colymp.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=5281
PS:
Now I have read something on the download site of colymp, that I don't really understand:
"...Download, purchase and use of colymp are permitted only within Europe..."
Sorry for that...I will ask the author in the colymp forum...
..only in german so far..
http://www.colymp.com/
I made a quick test and here is my first experience:
Workflow:
- install the programm "colymProfiler" * (a free test version is available online, making prints with "white stripes")
- print the testchart out of the software with your printer
- take a photo of this print with your camera (settings neutral, manual WB on the white borders)
- save this photo and let colymp calibrate it.
The result is a calibration or printer profile for photos of this camera printed with this printer setting + ink + paper.
Now there will appear a virtual printer in your windows system called "colymPrint", you can print out of all editors.
But you can also export ICC profiles from your calibrations for use with adobe and co.
The quality of the profiles depends much on the quality of the photo of the printed test chart. Pay attention on exposure and white balance of the camera (no "vivid" or similar settings) and on neutral, uniform lighting too.
If the camera gives neutral colors, the profile could also match other cameras more or less.
You can shoot more than one photo (of the printed test chart) and use them for one profile, colymp will calculate the average.
In my opinion it is an interesting approach, if you don't have a spyder print or colormunki.
I posted a few more info's here:
http://www.dslr-forum.de/showthread.php?t=1179409&page=2
with a test photo of two prints, using canon driver settings and colymp profile:
http://forum.colymp.com/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=5281
PS:
Now I have read something on the download site of colymp, that I don't really understand:
"...Download, purchase and use of colymp are permitted only within Europe..."
Sorry for that...I will ask the author in the colymp forum...