I have been printing exlcusively by using the Output from Qimage.
However there are instances where I would like to use some convenient programs where using Photoshop etc. Is simply too much of a pain. Examples are like greeting card applications, Invites etc. These programs simply do not manage color and yet the cardstock and their properties vary widely so that colors are not consistent.
So I have been experimenting with printing outside of Qimage and Photoshop or all programs that manages color and here is what I am finding.
I used a reference image with embedded sRGB. I am using an Epson R260 with Windows XP SP3. Where possible, the same rendering intents are used.
I have found that all Adobe applications produce identical output with the same ICC. This includes Lightroom. That is to be expected.
Qimage produces the identical image with slight variations in sharpness due to differences in sharpening. The color tones however are identical. Not surprising.
ACDSEE Pro 2.5 does not produce the same image as the previous applications when Color management is turned on.
If I turn off color management and let the print driver in Windows handle color management, I get the same results as using letting ACDSEE Pro 2.5 manage the color. Hmmmm....that's interesting. The driver in Windows does not have any rendering intents.
I then take the image, insert it into a MS Word document and then print it, using the same ICM options and letting the driver handle the ICM.
I get the same colors as ACDSEE pro as previous.
When I print the same image using no ICM or custom profiles the colors are distinctly different. The differences between the output of Adobe, Qimage and letting the other apps handle the colors is actually not very large but enough to notice a difference side by side.
It appears that there are two renditions to this. One camp has the output just like Adobe. Since the printed image and monitor image from Adobe apps appear very close to the monitor I am going to assume this camp is more accurate. However, the other camp is interesting since while different, they are consistent amongst themselves as well.
This leads me to wonder what is going on here? Are there two distinct different standards or maybe ACDSEE is using the windows engine and Adobe and Qimage use a different engine or standard?
Does anyone know or shed some light on what is going on?
However there are instances where I would like to use some convenient programs where using Photoshop etc. Is simply too much of a pain. Examples are like greeting card applications, Invites etc. These programs simply do not manage color and yet the cardstock and their properties vary widely so that colors are not consistent.
So I have been experimenting with printing outside of Qimage and Photoshop or all programs that manages color and here is what I am finding.
I used a reference image with embedded sRGB. I am using an Epson R260 with Windows XP SP3. Where possible, the same rendering intents are used.
I have found that all Adobe applications produce identical output with the same ICC. This includes Lightroom. That is to be expected.
Qimage produces the identical image with slight variations in sharpness due to differences in sharpening. The color tones however are identical. Not surprising.
ACDSEE Pro 2.5 does not produce the same image as the previous applications when Color management is turned on.
If I turn off color management and let the print driver in Windows handle color management, I get the same results as using letting ACDSEE Pro 2.5 manage the color. Hmmmm....that's interesting. The driver in Windows does not have any rendering intents.
I then take the image, insert it into a MS Word document and then print it, using the same ICM options and letting the driver handle the ICM.
I get the same colors as ACDSEE pro as previous.
When I print the same image using no ICM or custom profiles the colors are distinctly different. The differences between the output of Adobe, Qimage and letting the other apps handle the colors is actually not very large but enough to notice a difference side by side.
It appears that there are two renditions to this. One camp has the output just like Adobe. Since the printed image and monitor image from Adobe apps appear very close to the monitor I am going to assume this camp is more accurate. However, the other camp is interesting since while different, they are consistent amongst themselves as well.
This leads me to wonder what is going on here? Are there two distinct different standards or maybe ACDSEE is using the windows engine and Adobe and Qimage use a different engine or standard?
Does anyone know or shed some light on what is going on?