Peter Figen Online Upload & Sell: On
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p.1 #16 · Soft Proofing - Do you use it? | |
Wayne,
When you refer to "tweaking" a monitor profile, most experts in the digital color industry would think you were referring to editing the monitor profile, which, of course, is something you should never have to do. What it appears you are really referring to is calibrating to a different standard - in your case both gamma and white point. The gamma will make absolutely no difference in your on screen viewing, although there are reasons to keep it close to 2.2 and the native gamma of your screen. The white point color temperature however, can have an effect on soft proofing, particularly when you're trying to match an exact paper white. The real way to do it is to try different color temperature settings - usually between 5500 and 6500K until the white of your screen matches the white of your paper as close as possible visually. The exact color temperature that works can also be affected by monitor luminence - the brighter your screen is, the lower the correct temperature will be.
Chuck,
You are correct in that most profiles have two "sides" to them - Source to PCS and then PCS to Output. The best tool I've seen for profile editing is Gretag's Profile Editor module, as part of the ProfileMaker package. I also have the Kodak Custom Color profile editor, but it's completely non-intuitive, contrary to the opinion of as least on "expert" in the field. The biggest problem with editing is knowing when to edit which side of the profile. It's not always apparent, particularly when you want to affect the soft proof, and especially when you are trying to tweak how a hard proof prints. To put that type of tool into Photoshop would create chaos. Think about how confused so many are already. If you feel you need to edit your profiles, pony up the $500 for the Kodak package or take the plunge for ProfileMaker. Play with PM for a couple of years and you'll be amazed at what it does to your understanding of this.
One of the most difficult edits to accomplish is tweaking the white point of the Absolute Colorimetric tables - the ones you use when you are using your inkjet to simulate your offset. If you're proofing without a RIP, you want to convert from your press CMYK back to your inkjet RGB. If your inkjet proofing paper is considerably whiter than your press sheet, Absolute Colormetric will attempt to put the color of the press sheet into the white of your inkjet stock. Unfortunately, it doesn't take much instrument error in the whites to throw the AbCol tables off for that simulation. In my experience, it can take many rounds of trial and error to arrive at a place where the whites match perfectly, and your eyes are the best measurement tool for that job.
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