W. Fisher
Printer Guru
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2015
- Messages
- 197
- Reaction score
- 99
- Points
- 143
- Printer Model
- Epsons, Canons, Brother.
I use both i1 PhotoPro 2 and basICColor for print profiles. The i1 Pro 2 spectrometer works with basICColor dropRGB 2 and their Catch 5 which is there paper profiler combo.
Using either software, once I scan the test sheets you see the little targets with the Before and After colors in the boxes (i1 Profiler shows the two triangles in the box, and basICColor shows two large side-by-side rectangles).
Here's the rub:
The After boxes seem a little light in color which I suspect is due to the Epson 3880 driver setting with Color Management OFF (for profiling) and not laying down enough ink perhaps? I raised the amount by 10% in the driver which made the colors in the test images a little darker and even more bold in color. This was with the basICColor program that I'm sorting through over the i1 Profiler.
So I'm guessing even with Color Management turned off during printing, my 3880 isn't applying enough ink for profiling unless I boost the amount in the driver? No mention of doing this prior to profiling. I did notice one Breathing Color paper (Silverado metallic) automatically assigned a -15% to the manufacture's profile which seemed odd.
Other than using QTR and going through setting up ink loading it (It's a RIP vs Epson's driver.), how does one know how much density to change in the Epson driver for making a profile? Trial and error or maybe try and match the density in the test prints if they appear too light before committing to making a profile off them?
Thanks.
W. FIsher
Using either software, once I scan the test sheets you see the little targets with the Before and After colors in the boxes (i1 Profiler shows the two triangles in the box, and basICColor shows two large side-by-side rectangles).
Here's the rub:
The After boxes seem a little light in color which I suspect is due to the Epson 3880 driver setting with Color Management OFF (for profiling) and not laying down enough ink perhaps? I raised the amount by 10% in the driver which made the colors in the test images a little darker and even more bold in color. This was with the basICColor program that I'm sorting through over the i1 Profiler.
So I'm guessing even with Color Management turned off during printing, my 3880 isn't applying enough ink for profiling unless I boost the amount in the driver? No mention of doing this prior to profiling. I did notice one Breathing Color paper (Silverado metallic) automatically assigned a -15% to the manufacture's profile which seemed odd.
Other than using QTR and going through setting up ink loading it (It's a RIP vs Epson's driver.), how does one know how much density to change in the Epson driver for making a profile? Trial and error or maybe try and match the density in the test prints if they appear too light before committing to making a profile off them?
Thanks.
W. FIsher