These might be a bit out there, but I have a couple thoughts/questions regarding color profiling;
I just did a color adjustment for our high-end, professional, color paper printer (not a desktop, made for print shops) and it was so easy and fast... all you had to do was; print out a internal color chart, scan it in (using same machine) and repeat four times. It took maybe 2 minutes total, and worked perfectly.
My first question is this: Why couldn't a color profiling company create software, that ships with
hard copies that are color correct? You could adjust/dial-in whatever desktop scanner you use, using the color-correct profiling charts hard copies via their software. Next step, print out the same color profiling charts to your wide format printer and scan through desktop scanner... instead of the mind numbing and expensive way we do it now, using an eye-one.Does that make any sense? Even if it wasn't as accurate, it would be affordable and easy enough for everyone to create their own profiles.
The second thing, I have asked a couple years ago on here, but I'm reposting anyways:
Wouldn't it make more sense to import the rip software's color profiling charts into whatever design software you use, and then export them as you would do normally for a printfile? I have seen some major color shifts due to small color management changes made in the design software... by importing and then export from
the design software, it allows the rip program the opportunity to color correct them.. again, does that make sense?
I just did a color adjustment for our high-end, professional, color paper printer (not a desktop, made for print shops) and it was so easy and fast... all you had to do was; print out a internal color chart, scan it in (using same machine) and repeat four times. It took maybe 2 minutes total, and worked perfectly.
My first question is this: Why couldn't a color profiling company create software, that ships with
hard copies that are color correct? You could adjust/dial-in whatever desktop scanner you use, using the color-correct profiling charts hard copies via their software. Next step, print out the same color profiling charts to your wide format printer and scan through desktop scanner... instead of the mind numbing and expensive way we do it now, using an eye-one.Does that make any sense? Even if it wasn't as accurate, it would be affordable and easy enough for everyone to create their own profiles.
The second thing, I have asked a couple years ago on here, but I'm reposting anyways:
Wouldn't it make more sense to import the rip software's color profiling charts into whatever design software you use, and then export them as you would do normally for a printfile? I have seen some major color shifts due to small color management changes made in the design software... by importing and then export from
the design software, it allows the rip program the opportunity to color correct them.. again, does that make sense?