- Thread starter
- #11
PalaDolphin
Printer Guru
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2016
- Messages
- 215
- Reaction score
- 92
- Points
- 127
- Location
- Saint Paul, MN
- Printer Model
- Canon Pro-100, HP 7760, RX500
I was very systematic in my approach to filling these cartridges. I'm absolutely sure there was not cross contamination.That thousand of people have used this profile and even with Joe's profile, you need to do the same indicates a workflow issue. Same result when using OEM ink as well.
Second point, and an important one.......did you softproof the result? No. Time for more reading and then checking your workflow. Not an ink issue because it started apparently with the OEM inks as well.
Color management took me years to understand and a few feet of paper ( not long but HIGH) in the process.
Here's another strange anomaly to your adventure. Why does the first print come out a little dark but when compared to the OEM prints stated later appears a little undersaturated. This is counter to your first observation. Isn't it?
Looking at the adventure and over filling which we saw the evidence for, I can suspect that when you first filled your carts, you might have cross contaminated the grays due to overfilling and this would explain the darkness if somehow GY got into LGY or some other darker color got into a lighter color. Then when the cross contamination was purged through more printing then you observed the under saturation. Which is there and why the ICCs are provided.
Next do a nozzle check and compare the color bars and how close the Photo Colors are to the Normal colors. You could also have put the incorrect ink into the tanks but then it would not be a case of intensity but cast. I'll put money that Cyan is in the PhotoCyan.
I've just started learning about soft proofing. Safe to say I haven't got the hang of it yet.
And I wouldn't put too much weight on being under saturated; it's barely noticeable.
The fact is that when compared side-by-side the Canon ink vs PC ink w/-15 Intensity are virtually identical. So, none of the mixings of inks could've happened otherwise they wouldn't be so close.
It's safe to say that no one has experienced the darkening I've experienced.
Here's the thing: it took me a while to get the right ICC profile, paper, viewing lighting, monitor calibration to get the Canon ink to work perfectly. When I change only two things, the ICM profile and PC ink, it's darker. By brightening it (-15 Intensity), it's nearly an exact match. It's that simple.