I just got off the phone with X-rite and I'd like to get into using a calibrator and making some profiles to get better results.
Does anybody have any experience with x-rite, or calibration with Vuteks or Dye-Sub?
Tovis said:They Suggested the:
I1 Basic
ProfileMaker 5 Platinum
A lot of our clients are finicky about PMS colors, after you built your profiles does they hit pretty right on?
How do you create a bad profile, (So I now how to not create a bad one?)
i1Basic here as well
Lots, your best bet would be to get the i1Basic package. When you want to upgrade from there (if needed) i1Match modules will do that.
Lots of experience with colorburst and the 5300s here but I never used I1 Basic. I have always had ProfileMaker Publish. Measure tool in publish has a feature that is critical for the 5300s if you plan to do strip reading. There is a a checkbox called "Low Test Chart Resolution" which I found to be critical. I1 Basic may have this feature but I am not familiar. You can create profiles directly in colorburst for Vutek if you want but without the low res feature, you will become frustrated with all the read errors you get. Also if using colorburst, be sure to get the UV-cut Eye-one. This is or used to be ColorBurst's dirtly little secret. Chroma based linearizations will not work with non-uv spectros and the profiling built in to colorburst does / did not have the ability to compensate for UV brighteners.
Do you like yours?
They have built in compensation in Colorburst since version 7.something. A neat little checkbox about chroma if i remember correctly. I've used both a DTP41 (out-dated) and one of their newer Eye-One's with similar results.
Not familiar with the low resolution thing, we printed 360dpi and 180dpi profiles with out 3360 and never had a problem reading the data on the DTP41.
Do you like yours?
Sorry, I think we misunderstood each other. Without the UV Cut spectrophotometer, chroma based linearizations used to give you a yellow tint. Until I purchased the I1 UV, I was forced to do density based linearizations in ColorBurst.