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Author Topic: Blacks not printing black with QU and Pro-100  (Read 2419 times)
NAwlins Contrarian
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« on: November 02, 2022, 05:05:55 AM »

For some reason I cannot get black to print maximum black using Qimage Ultimate 2023.103, and I think it is likely to be some setting issue I'm misunderstanding.

I'm trying to assess B&W printable range and linearity. I made a test image file with 10 patches from pure black to pure white, i.e., L* = 0 to L* = 100 in steps, all with a* = b* = 0. Lightroom's Develop module confirms that the file's black patch is L* = 0, and all the other patches are +/- 0.2 from the desired L* values. An RGB color-picker likewise confirms that the black patch is 0,0,0. ICC Profile Inspector reports that the ICC printing profile used has an L* minimum of 5, and a visual inspection of a plot of the profile at the ICC View website confirms this.

I printed to a Canon Pro-100, using the same driver settings I use to build ICC profiles with my X-Rite ColorMunki Photo spectrophotometer, color matching = none etc. In Qimage I have it set for relative colorimetric rendering intent and black point compensation--which I think should make the 'black' patch come out about L* = 5. By actual measurement with the ColorMunki, the 'black' patch is L* = 9. I got similar results with two standard papers, Canon Pro Luster and Canon Glossy II. I went back and re-measured some old profiling targets, and indeed the ColorMunki reports as expected the 'black' patch is about L* = 5.

Am I wrong in thinking that using relative colorimetric with black point compensation, an area of L* = 0 in the file should print as maximum printable black i.e. about L* = 5? Is there some other setting you think I might be missing?

Thanks!
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« Reply #1 on: November 02, 2022, 01:12:52 PM »

There are so many variables involved, I wouldn't know where to begin.  Obviously you'll never get L=0 on any paper so the actual black that gets produced is based on the paper, the media type chosen, the profile you made and how it was read via the target, the quality set in the driver, etc.  You also may not get the darkest color available if you restrict a=0 and b=0 because you are handicapping the printer's ability to print the darkest patch by saying that darkest patch has to be completely neutral.  In other words, if you turned off color management by setting printer profile to OFF (as you would for printing your profiling target) and you print a 0,0,0 patch, that patch might actually be the darkest patch the printer can produce but the a and b values may not be zero.  With a patch that dark, they may actually be far from zero and it'll still look black!

So in the end, depending on the profile itself, trying to print L=0, a=0, b=0 may actually not end up producing the darkest "black".  That's pretty normal in the profiling world and shouldn't affect your prints.  It's part of the compromise being made by the color management engine with respect to mapping Lab to RGB values.

Regards,
Mike
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BrianPrice
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« Reply #2 on: November 03, 2022, 11:32:29 AM »

Hi
The latest version of the iStudio software lets you create a black and white profile in the same way as a colour *one, by printing pages of coloured squares.* I've found it to work exceptionally well in producing pure black *and white prints.*. The latest version is 1.5.1, available here:

https://www.xrite.com/service-support/downloads/i/i1studio_v1_5_1

Brian

PS I've got another problem now, my keyboard is inserting random asterisks.  Sad

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Fred A
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« Reply #3 on: November 03, 2022, 11:35:20 AM »

Quote
PS I've got another problem now, my keyboard is inserting random asterisks.  Sad

It's Just your computer reminding you that you are a STAR

Stay well
Fred
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NAwlins Contrarian
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« Reply #4 on: November 04, 2022, 02:55:19 AM »

Thanks for all the thoughts, and to update my issue:

(1) I realize that printable L*min will never be 0, although with a few combinations the ICC profiles indicate it should get down to about 3. With the Pro-100, Canon Luster, and Canon's ICC profile (the file is CNBBDUA0.ICM), the profile indicates L* min = 5, and that's close to a* = b* = 0 (actually about at b* = -1). At precisely a* = b* = 0, profile-indicated L* min is about 5.5. I'm basing this on observing the 3D gamut plot, rotated and enlarged, at https://www.iccview.de/, a screen capture of which is the first attachment. But measured with the ColorMunki, a file printed in Qimage with rel. col. + BPC, the printed image patch of L* = a* = B* = 0 measures L* = 9.

Similarly, with the Pro-100, Canon Glossy II, and Canon's ICC profile (the file is CNBBDMA0.ICM), profile-indicated L* min = 5, but that's at about a* = 0, b* = -3. I had written to see the second attachment, but with it the board reported I'd exceeded my allocated 256 KB. At precisely a* = b* = 0, L* min is about 7. The printed patch of input values L* = a* = B* = 0 measures L* = 11.

So it's seems like there's an issue significantly beyond L* min not being neutral and/or being substantially above 0.

(2) I'm aware of, and use, the X-Rite software's ability to make special B&W profiles, and I intend to do more testing, partly around that. But to try to isolate variables and start with the most current, widely-used combinations, I decided to start with Canon's main papers and Canon's own profiles. My sense and limited testing indicates that X-Rite-built B&W profiles deliver slightly more neutral grays but no increase in Dmax / decrease in L* min.

(3) FWIW and as a comparison and control, I got two targets printed on Ilford RC silver halide paper, Pearl surface from Mpix (on which the target patch with input values L* = a* = B* = 0 measures L* = 7, a* = 1.0, b* = 2.4) and Glossy surface from Fromex (on which the target patch of L* = a* = B* = 0 measures L* = 8, a* = 0.8, b* = 2.2). Also, taking repeated measurements, over different days and after different calibrations, with the ColorMunki Photo shows that all measurements are within about +/- 0.3 of each other, and many are closer than that. In other words, I can't vouch for this spectrophotometer's accuracy (reporting the true value), but I can vouch for its precision (repeatedly reporting the same value).
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« Reply #5 on: November 04, 2022, 11:57:58 AM »

While this may be a fun exercise, it is not particularly useful.  First of all, I have to throw out any observations you make (including your attachment) where you are measuring Canon "stock" profiles.  Those were made with who-knows-what equipment and conditions and then you are using your own spectro to measure the results.  Of course they are not going to match.

Second, you have to understand what profiling tools are doing when they make your profiles.  There is a lot of smoothing, interpolation, and extrapolation going on.  As you've discovered, the darkest patch (with the lowest L) may not be black: a and b are not zero.  So the profiling software will likely not make that the black point.  So what is the black point?  It will be a patch that has a slightly higher L with a and b closer to (but not necessarily exactly) zero.  And now you've picked a black point that is brighter than some non-neutral "colors".  The profile will not allow that, so what does it do?  The whole bottom end of the gamut (near L=0) has to be smoothed to compensate for the fact that you have a black that is less "black" than a non-neutral color.  So things are smoothed so that you have no "colors" that are "blacker than black".  This sort of smoothing can cause L to come up just a little more so you may not get the darkest thing that you would call "black".  In fact, some colors that the printer can technically print closer to L=0 will not even be included (printable) in the profile.  Think of it as a function that loops back on itself in the X direction: that's no longer a function.  So the profiling tool will not allow that inconsistency in the profile data.

Nothing is working "wrong" here and there is no "issue" but you could also try other profiling tools because that smoothing part that I'm referencing is more art than science.  Try Argyll for example.  See if you get any better results in the profile(s).

But in the end, print and see if you like the results?  Do your blacks really look gray?  I doubt it.  My guess is they look fine and you'd never see this as an "issue" in your printing because the whole color management system is doing the best it could with what it was given.

Regards,
Mike
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