that can't work in Photoshop. plugins can't override the output color
profile processing. you can read that in the Photoshop Plugin SDK. what PIM
does is give the correct input color profile that is wider in gamut than the
profile embedded in the JPEG header. if you read the PIM docs carefully, you
will see that the Epson RGB color profile is almost identical to the Adobe
wide gamut RGB one. you still need to pick the right color profile for the
printer in Photoshop and then the right media. the monitor profile has been
removed from the equation. if you are using the Epson FilmFactory software,
it knows what printer profile to use based on your media settings. that is
another factor removed. PIM doesn't do anything you can't do with proper
color management. i used it for a while and uninstalled it because i was
getting just as consistent results without PIM.

Herb....
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Bill Owens" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, October 21, 2003 8:18 PM
Subject: Re: *istD and P.I.M.


> If I'm understanding it correctly, and I think I am, neither monitor or
> printer color profile matching is used.  The embedded color space is
changed
> to Epson RGB 2001 and the printer color matching is turned off.  This
> supposedly prints pretty much exactly what is recorded in the camera.


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