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									 «  on: May 18, 2011, 08:20:16 PM »  | 
								
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May 2011: Printing the Same Colors in Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop  
        Background 
  Since both Qimage 
  Ultimate and Photoshop are popular photographic applications, I often 
  handle questions related to getting a color match between the two programs 
  when printing photos.  I'm not sure why you would want to print photos 
  from Photoshop if you have Qimage Ultimate but maybe you've just upgraded your 
  printing from Photoshop to Qimage Ultimate and you want to see the 
  similarities and differences with respect to color management to get up to 
  speed quickly with Qimage Ultimate.  In 
  this article, we'll cover the steps to get a good color match from Photoshop 
  CS5 (and more recent editions of Photoshop) and Qimage Ultimate: the instructions are similar for the old (retired) 
  editions of Qimage as well. 
 
          
        The basics 
  Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop will print 
  visually identical color in both color managed mode (application manages 
  color) and non color managed mode (printer driver handles color) provided you 
  do two things: set both the    
  
  program settings
  and the 
  
  printer driver settings
  identically.  
  In concept, it is that simple.  There are two steps in any photographic 
  printing process.  The first is how the software (Qimage Ultimate or 
  Photoshop) sends image data to the driver and the second is how the driver 
  interprets that data.  Get both in sync, and you get identical color: 
  that is, choose the same (comparable) settings in Qimage Ultimate and 
  Photoshop and make the same selections (paper type, quality, color, etc.) in 
  the driver.  Let's take a look at how to do the same thing in both 
  programs.
  
    
Color Managed (use this option if you have an 
ICC profile for your printer/paper/ink) 
  Printer Driver Settings 
  We will handle the color managed workflow 
  first.  This is the workflow where you have an ICC profile for your 
  printer, paper, and ink.  You might have an ICC profile for a certain 
  paper that installed with your printer driver or one that came with a pack of 
  third party paper that had profiles for your model printer along with 
  instructions.  First keep in mind that a printer/paper/ink profile is 
  useless without instructions on how to at least set the driver settings!  
  Without those instructions, you won't know whether the profile is designed for 
  the highest quality setting, the next to highest setting, somewhere in the 
  middle, and you won't know how to set color-affecting options like "high 
  speed" mode and other options.  The first step in getting a good color 
  match is to use "File", "Printer Setup" in Qimage Ultimate and "File", 
  "Print", "Print Setup" in Photoshop and make the exact same selections in the 
  driver: select your printer, then select properties and select the proper 
  paper type, quality level, and turn off color management in the driver by 
  selecting "None" for color matching (Canon and HP) or "No Color Adjustment" 
  (Epson printers).  Again, take notes on the selections you make so that 
  you can repeat the exact same selections from both Qimage Ultimate and 
  Photoshop. 
  
    
    
      
        Potential Pothole #1: 
        With respect to printer driver settings, remember that Qimage 
        Ultimate remembers the last driver settings that you used and also 
        allows you to save/recall an unlimited number of setups that include 
        both program and driver settings.  Photoshop does not allow for 
        this facility so don't assume that it remembered all your driver and 
        program settings.  When in doubt, check them out! | 
       
     
    
   
  Program settings 
  Now that we have made the exact same selections in the printer 
  driver, we must ensure that both Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop send exactly 
  the same data TO the driver!  We do this by making comparable settings, 
  telling both programs that we are using color management and identifying the 
  profile and rendering to use with that profile.  Here's how we do that: 
  
  In Qimage Ultimate: 
    
      - 
  
In the Printers and Settings tab on the main window, drop down "Printer 
	Profile" 
  and select "Choose New Profile": the "Color Management" dialog will appear. 
       
      - 
  
On the Color Management dialog that appears, click the "..." 
  button next to the printer profile file name and select the profile (ICC file) 
  for the printer/paper you are using. 
       
      - 
  
On that same dialog, check "Relative Colorimetric" intent as a first 
  choice for photos. 
       
      - 
  
Leave "Black Point Compensation" selected at all times. 
       
      - 
  
Click "OK" to save the settings, then click the "Print" button 
  (upper right of main window) if you are ready to print now. 
       
     
  In Photoshop CS5: 
    
      - 
  
Click "File", "Print": the "Print" dialog appears. 
       
      - 
  
On the top right of the print dialog, drop down and select 
  "Color Management". 
       
      - 
  
Under "Color Handling", select "Photoshop Manages Colors". 
       
      - 
  
Drop down "Printer Profile" and select the same file you 
  selected in step 2 in the Qimage Ultimate instructions above.  Note that 
  Photoshop only shows the description inside the ICC profile while Qimage 
  Ultimate shows both the file name and description, so be sure the description 
  in Photoshop's drop down matches the description shown next to "Prtr ICC" in 
  Qimage Ultimate. 
       
      - 
  
Select the same rendering intent as you did in step 3 in the 
  Qimage Ultimate instructions above: example, "Perceptual". 
       
      - 
  
Leave "Black Point Compensation" selected. 
       
      - 
  
Click "Done" if you are just setting things up or click the 
  "Print" button to print immediately. 
       
     
   
  
    
    
      
        
        Potential Pothole #2: 
        Since Photoshop is an image editor, you may have modified the photo 
        you are currently viewing.  Have you saved those changes?  If 
        you edit/change/convert an image and then print in Photoshop, remember 
        to save those changes before you print the file with Qimage Ultimate, or 
        you'll be printing two different files! | 
        
       
     
    
   
  
  
    
   
  
    
    
      
        
        Potential Pothole #3: 
        Not all profiles are created equal.  Qimage Ultimate and 
        Photoshop will only produce (visually) identical color if the photo 
        itself has a proper profile embedded in the image, and the printer 
        profile you are using is a valid profile.  Unfortunately I see a 
        lot of malformed profiles in this business: profiles that have jagged or 
        non-continuous data, profiles where the black points don't match in the 
        forward and reverse transforms, invalid tone curves, etc.  
         
        
        If you've done the above and you are still not getting a match 
        between Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop with respect to color, run this 
        simple test.  Print two copies of the same image in Photoshop, 
        one with Perceptual intent and Black Point Compensation on, and 
        another with Perceptual intent but Black Point Compensation off.  
        Compare the two prints.  Are they different in color?  If so, 
        you know you are dealing with a corrupted (malformed) printer 
        profile.  This is because perceptual intent already handles scaling 
        of black so black point compensation should do nothing (whether on or 
        off) if you are using Perceptual intent.  If the BPC-on and BPC-off 
        prints are not identical for Perceptual intent, it is likely that 
        Photoshop is trying to do some error correction on the malformed 
        profile.  Qimage doesn't do error correction and presents the 
        results exactly as specified in the profile, so this can cause a 
        difference in color.  Reference:
        
        http://www.color.org/AdobeBPC.pdf (see section 6.2). 
        
  Other data corruption can also cause differences when a 
  profile is not up to par so it is important to check with the printer/paper 
  manufacturer to be sure you have the latest version of the profile and that it 
  was intended for the printer and driver version you are using. 
         | 
        
       
     
    
   
  
    
  
  
    
    
      
        
        Potential Pothole #4: 
        If you are using (recalling) a saved printer setup in Qimage 
        Ultimate and you are having color matching issues, it is possible that 
        you have updated your printer driver and the (old) saved settings are no 
        longer valid in the new driver you are now using.If you update 
        your driver to a new version, we suggest that you click "File", "Printer 
        Setup" in Qimage Ultimate and drop down and select your printer (model) 
        from the list (select it from the list again even if it is 
        already selected): this will clear all the printer settings and reload 
        defaults for the new driver.  Then recreate your printer driver 
        settings and resave them to "refresh" the settings under the new driver 
        version.  Do not load a previous setup made under the old driver 
        because some settings may not be consistent/valid.  Start fresh 
        with a new driver version.  | 
        
       
     
    
   
  
 
  
Non Color Managed (use this option if you do 
not have an ICC profile for your printer/paper/ink) 
  Printer Driver Settings 
  When we don't have an ICC profile specific to 
  our printer, paper, and ink, we may use a non color managed workflow.  
  Here we basically defer to the printer driver and we let it handle color as 
  best it can.  We do this by enabling color management in the printer 
  driver itself.  The first step in getting a good color match is to use 
  "File", "Printer Setup" in Qimage Ultimate and "File", "Print", "Print Setup" 
  in Photoshop and make the exact same selections in the driver: select your 
  printer, then select properties and select the proper paper type, quality 
  level, and turn on color management in the driver by selecting "ICM" for color 
  matching (use "Host ICM" if you are using an Epson driver and that option is 
  available).  Again, take notes on the selections you make so that you can 
  repeat the exact same selections from both Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop. 
  Program settings 
  Now that we have made the exact same selections in the printer 
  driver, we must ensure that both Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop send exactly 
  the same data TO the driver!  We do this by making comparable settings, 
  telling both programs that we are going to defer color handling to the printer 
  driver.  Here's how we do that: 
    
  In Qimage Ultimate: 
      
        - 
  
In the Printers and Settings tab on the main window, drop down "Printer ICC" 
  and select "Let printer/driver manage color". 
         
        - 
  
Click the "Print" button (upper right of main window) if you 
  are ready to print now. 
         
       
  In Photoshop CS5: 
      
        - 
  
Click "File", "Print": the "Print" dialog appears. 
         
        - 
  
On the top right of the print dialog, drop down and select 
  "Color Management". 
         
        - 
  
Under "Color Handling", select "Printer Manages Colors". 
         
        - 
  
Click "Done" if you are just setting things up or click the 
  "Print" button to print immediately. 
         
       
     
 
  
 
 
Epilogue
  
When referring to the 
information in this article, keep one basic thing in mind: Qimage Ultimate and 
Photoshop will produce visually identical color as long as I do two things: (1) 
duplicate all settings in the printer driver exactly in both programs and (2) 
duplicate the color management options inside both programs.  If you have a 
printer ICC profile for the printer, paper, and ink you are using, you'll want 
to choose the printer profile in Qimage Ultimate and Photoshop and let it do the 
work, while turning color management OFF in the driver!  Conversely, if you 
do not have an ICC profile, you'll want to let the printer/driver manage color 
by selecting the "Let printer/driver manage color" (Qimage Ultimate) or "Printer 
Manages Colors" (Photoshop), while turning color management (ICM or "Host ICM") 
ON in the driver.  Finally, if you are trying to get a (printed color) 
match between Photoshop and Qimage and you are having trouble, be sure to refer 
to the potential potholes listed above. 
  
 
Mike Chaney, author, 
Qimage, Profile Prism, FlashPipe, TT Dyno 
 
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