Roy,
A printer profile is there in the first place to translate you image gamut as good as possible to the gamut possible with the inks and paper it is made for. That print will build on the paper white physically available. In profile creation there is often a choice to keep the image neutrality absolute or starting from the paper white, the last is almost never neutrally white. In both cases the profiling compensates (subtracts)the physical existence of the paper white in the gamut but differently. That sums up the printing device side of the profile. For soft proofing another, related part of the profile is used. In the profile the paper white spec is available too and has to be used (added) for paper white simulation. If the soft proofing feature of the application doesn't try to simulate the paper white on the display then that doesn't tell anything about how good the profiling to the print works. In advanced profile editors the two profile parts can be edited separately to get the display and print more related. Something that should only be done when you have done everything to get your display and printer/print media properly calibrated and profiled.
If Qimage does a white paper compensation by default it is very little if compared to the difference in the whites Photoshop creates on the switch between original and softproof with paper white compensation on. I do not see it. Select a profile for a warm paper like German Etching. Select a profile assigned image and switch between original and softproof with space and keep your eyes on an RGB 255 area.
I prefer print proofs anyway.
As far as I know soft proofing doesn't have a standard and it is the developer who has to brew the mix.
met vriendelijke groeten, Ernst Dinkla
Try:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Wide_Inkjet_Printers/Hi Ernst,
Thanks for your patient and well written explanation. I have learned much from this and your previous posts about other subjects on this site.
However, the one point that still bothers me is the fact that the profile is made from a STANDARDISED TARGET print which theoretically includes and bias in paper colouration. For example if the paper had an exceptional warm tone, this would be included in the readings made by the spectro tool when calibrating the values for the profile of that specific paper. Hence the need for additional paper white setting appears redundant as this would have been allowed for in the calculation of the profile values.
Having said that, I should mention I have no specialised knowledge in this area, and was relying primarily on logic and common sense. This usually stands me in good stead, and oftentimes deep water. This may be one of those occasions. The fact that my custom profiles reasonably well match the Qimage soft proof may be more ignorant luck than skill.
Then again my print workflow always includes a couple reduced size test image on critical colour/tones.
Thank you for the Yahoo printer link. I will spend some time digesting the content.
Roy