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Author Topic: Outsource printing  (Read 5549 times)
henkbos
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« on: April 21, 2010, 02:11:43 PM »

Hello all,

I did search but could not find an appropriate answer.
What is the best workflow to prepare prints for a print lab? I have downloaded the proper driver for their printer along with the proper ICC profile for the paper they are going to use.
Can I assume that if I 'print to file' and hand the file to the lab the superior quality of QImage will remain or will it be affected by the driver the lab is using? The lab does not have QImage installed.

Note that the staff in the 'lab' (actually a print shop with a good printer -Canon ipf9000) is not very qualified, but that's all what is available in Jordan.

Thanks.

Henk
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Ernst Dinkla
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« Reply #1 on: April 21, 2010, 07:01:45 PM »

Print to file. Set 300PPI or 600PPI depending on the size of the print and the paper quality you want and the image data you have. Use the TIFF format. Use the Printer ICC + Print sharpening route. Select the printer profile they delivered if it is an RGB-device profile and select the default print sharpening for sizes up to A3, if above lower the print sharpening. In case the profile they delivered is a CMYK-device one and used with their RIP then you can not use the printer profile, in that case select "Let printer driver control CM". The data you produce will have the original color space assigned again. The shop will do the actual printer CM then.

met vriendelijke groeten, Ernst Dinkla

Try: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Wide_Inkjet_Printers/


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henkbos
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« Reply #2 on: April 22, 2010, 08:26:59 AM »

Thanks, Ernst.
To be clear: I have not received any profiles from the printer, but downloaded the driver of the printer they are using from the Canon website. Not even sure if they use ICC profiles  Embarrassed
I guess the safest way for optimal results is to use the proper printer driver, load the profile for the paper that will be used (even if the store does not use the profile), make my adjustments and print to file, leaving the CA to be managed by their printer?
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Ernst Dinkla
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« Reply #3 on: April 22, 2010, 09:59:24 AM »

Thanks, Ernst.
To be clear: I have not received any profiles from the printer, but downloaded the driver of the printer they are using from the Canon website. Not even sure if they use ICC profiles  Embarrassed
I guess the safest way for optimal results is to use the proper printer driver, load the profile for the paper that will be used (even if the store does not use the profile), make my adjustments and print to file, leaving the CA to be managed by their printer?

For Print to File you do not need the Canon printer driver. The problem I see is whether they use a RIP or the normal Canon driver and in the last case whether they have CM done by the printer driver or in the application they print from. I doubt that they are not using any CM. In case they select an ICC printer profile that is different from the one you use or if they use the driver CM (based on LUT tables usually) then you get double profiling, Same if they use a RIP. I think it is wiser to use Print to File and keep the image's assigned profile in the produced Qimage data, sRGB of AdobeRGB most likely. So set Let Printer driver control CM is the choice in Qimage and the Printshop will have to do the CM. If they are lousy on calibrating, profiling, media preset selection on the iPF9000 you will not get that corrected at your side anyway. I think they will do a good job though. Het is niet echt een derde wereld land, om het een beetje politiek correct uit te drukken.


met vriendelijke groeten, Ernst Dinkla

Try: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Wide_Inkjet_Printers/









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henkbos
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« Reply #4 on: April 22, 2010, 10:54:15 AM »

Het is niet echt een derde wereld land, om het een beetje politiek correct uit te drukken.

The first guy who did some work never heard of pixels. That tells the story!  Wink





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