Hello Darius,
I use an HP 8600 OfficeJet printer too, and although I never had any hopes (or intentions) of using it to print photos, after a few experiments I'm very pleased and slightly surprised that I am getting fair-quality colour prints from it! The absolute control over the printer that I'm enjoying with Qimage, and the confidence it gives me to run comparative test-prints is bliss - pure bliss!
Darius,
With all due respect, this is a scanner, fax machine, copier, and a printer. As far as my research goes, it offers no printer profiles...
I can confirm this! (As also mentioned by Terry) It's a fact that HP don't supply any ICC profiles for this printer, which I think is very very odd, even though it's marketed primarily as an office-machine.
So even though I've got a fully colour-managed workflow - with a calibrated monitor especially - the only "color-management" option we've got for this printer is to trust it to render our prints with its built-in sRGB "profile", and to prepare our photos accordingly. In other words, to trim our colours in our image editor to suit an sRGB printer gamut.
This is giving me very respectable prints, with colours and tones that
do match those on my monitor, but with some understandable variations based on (a) the well-known fact that the
reflective print surface will never have quite the same 'fidelity' that we see on our
radiating monitors, and (b) the annoying fact that the names on the packaging on HP's free-sample papers don't exactly match the names provided in the 8600's print-preferences drop-down list of paper types! and (c) when using a third-party/non-HP paper type with this printer then of course we'll get variable results, because the HP driver doesn't "know" how best to manage its impressively high-definition ink-flow onto that alien paper. Hence the need for some test prints.
On that last point, when I'm doing comparative tests I keep careful notes about the "most successful" prints so that I know which "HP printer paper" was
theoretically set in my 8600 driver, coupled with which paper-type was
physically loaded in my printer-tray. I record the 8600-driver-named paper type in a meaningfully-named Qimage "Printer Setup", knowing I can reliably return to exactly that driver setting.
As an example, when I load my paper tray with Kodak Premium Photo Paper (250gsm, Gloss)(currently available at good discounts!) I get optimal colour rendition when I "tell" the 8600 driver that it will be printing onto either of "HP Premium Plus Photo Paper", or "HP Advanced Photo Paper". But conversely, onto that same paper, if I "told" the 8600 that it would be printing onto "HP Bright White Paper" then I'd get wishy-washy pale colours in comparison. (Of course some good or silly permutations can be guessed-at in advance
)
Nevertheless, with Qimage, you can get the best prints possible if you follow these guidelines.
(....) Set Qimage to Let Printer Manage Color..
I agree. Setting Qimage to "Let printer/driver manage color" in the "Prtr ICC" option on the Qimage Job Properties tab is working well for me.
Of course, tell the driver what paper you are using and to use the best quality output....
I concur.
In fact - on the setting for "best quality output" - although I
might be wrong to give credit for this to Qimage, I do thank Qimage and it's marvellous interaction with my printer for the fact that whenever I set my preferred paper type using that Printer/page setup button (the
"3rd icon in from the top right" mentioned earlier by Terry), then my printer driver / 8600 preferences are
automatically set to "Output Quality" = "Best". I haven't had to set this myself so far.
I still hope to buy a "proper" colour printer some day! But in the meantime, for my "not for serious sale" photo prints, I'm rather pleased with this "sRGB only" 8600 OfficeJet printer!
Colin P.