- Thread starter
- #11
W. Fisher
Printer Guru
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2015
- Messages
- 197
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- Printer Model
- Epsons, Canons, Brother.
Thanks Roy for the video link.
I watched it and to my surprise the Epson Glossy proifle I made pretty much follows the one you captured from the video with regards to the hue and saturation.
Problem is that it is in 2D (Yxy) and loses the L* values for the lightness and darkness of the color. Putting the same profile into 3D L*ab and showing that lightness/darkness of that Epson profile shows that it really doesn't cover that much of the sRGB gamut space in L*ab, and perhaps only 75%-80% or so. I know my blacks are no where near the sRGB black nor the sRGB whites either in the 3D of the same paper profile shown below against the 2D one on the left like the video shows.
Would be interesting if the printer makers would publish some sort of basic color space numbers to go along with maybe their glossy and matte papers so we could evaluate them. Prints 85% sRGB or something similar like they do with monitors - although they likely would fib those numbers in some fancy marketing and ad speak: i.e. "Capable of 100% Adobe 1998 RGB" .... "in the year 2025 or in the Yxy 2D space" in much smaller print.
Oh well, sort of interesting. But that PS Soft-Proofing wiping out that sRGB gamut as much as it did is something I didn't expect to see and I thought it was linked to the print's ICC profile, but maybe not. Some abitrary color space that the Soft-Proof must compare against somehow. Holdover from CMYK printers maybe. I don't know.
W.F.
I watched it and to my surprise the Epson Glossy proifle I made pretty much follows the one you captured from the video with regards to the hue and saturation.
Problem is that it is in 2D (Yxy) and loses the L* values for the lightness and darkness of the color. Putting the same profile into 3D L*ab and showing that lightness/darkness of that Epson profile shows that it really doesn't cover that much of the sRGB gamut space in L*ab, and perhaps only 75%-80% or so. I know my blacks are no where near the sRGB black nor the sRGB whites either in the 3D of the same paper profile shown below against the 2D one on the left like the video shows.
Would be interesting if the printer makers would publish some sort of basic color space numbers to go along with maybe their glossy and matte papers so we could evaluate them. Prints 85% sRGB or something similar like they do with monitors - although they likely would fib those numbers in some fancy marketing and ad speak: i.e. "Capable of 100% Adobe 1998 RGB" .... "in the year 2025 or in the Yxy 2D space" in much smaller print.
Oh well, sort of interesting. But that PS Soft-Proofing wiping out that sRGB gamut as much as it did is something I didn't expect to see and I thought it was linked to the print's ICC profile, but maybe not. Some abitrary color space that the Soft-Proof must compare against somehow. Holdover from CMYK printers maybe. I don't know.
W.F.