I've got the calibration processes nailed down. In doing so I've learned colorburst like the back of my hand. If anybody needs any help let me know if they are trying to implement color management.
Also, Does anybody use RGB in this industry?
~Tovis
so creating a RGB profile widened the Gamut?
Not if you are printing to a CMYK printer.
Wrong RGB will increase the gamut of most large format printers... if you use only cmyk you are limiting the capabilities of your printer some.. <!-- / message --> <!-- controls -->
That's because you don't have a properly calibrated and profiled system. RGB will not not expand the gamut to a CMYK device.
The RBG vs CMYK Colour Specturm below shows why
your still wrong.
if you look the monitor color covers more area than cmyk color. so if you use the cmyk color space (us swop?) then any colors your printer may be able to print outside that cmyk are not available to you. and then if you use adobe rgb1998 the colors available are even greater..
i'm not saying you will get all those colors but you will get as close as possible with your printer.
of course your profiles and settings (rendering intents) will effect the outcome but rgb gives you a larger printing gamut. cmyk seems to be more predictable in some cases but rgb will help you get all you cam from the printer.
when i design (in adobe) i use adobe rgb1998 .. if i use cmyk swop it limits the colors to the cmyk swop colors and my printer is capable of more colors than the SWOP profile has. i still soft proof to see how much things might change sometimes (bright yellows can look greenish)
Design to the printer colour space, i.e. use that profile in PhotoShop. Why would you use a SWOP profile when it's intended for Web Offset Printing and has a narrower gamut? Press ink hues and digital ink hues are very different too and will exhibit what you described.
Likewise using adobeRGB will create problems as it has a wider colour gamut and colours will get clipped and you will spend countless time colour correcting.
Designing to the output profile ties that file to a specific media and inkset. What about files that come in or go out to other printers and agencies?
Design in RGB and softproof to the output profile. Let the RIP do the work and maximize the gamut. If your RGB conversions are not accurately reflecting the colors in the artwork then switch to a relative colorimetric rendering intent. A Perceptual intent will maximize the tone curves, but shifts the hues in order to do so.
You sure? Try this create a Yellow in RGB in PhotoShop using AdobeRGB, then assign or convert to SWOP per say. Tell me if you read Cyan in the pure Yellow? Use what ever rendering intent you like.
We supply our output profile to the more colour savvy clients just as SWOP has a standard for their inks. It just makes life more easy.
Design to the printer colour space, i.e. use that profile in PhotoShop.
Relative Colormetric takes into account if your paper or vinyl has a yellow cast Absolute does not.
Relative Colorimetric is the appropriate colorimetric intent for most of the sign industry.