Of course there is always the question, will the print show the added 
color space or does the printer just down sample it internally? I would 
guess the later, so it would just be a convenience. Basically paper and 
ink will only reflect so much light. To get more you would have to print 
a transparency. It is simple physics. Luckily most photographers believe 
in physics, over on an audio forum I have noticed that they mostly 
believe in magic.


Boros Attila wrote:
> Hello Rob,
> 
> Wednesday, December 13, 2006, 1:03:12 AM, you wrote:
> 
> DIS> Commercial print services generally require sRGB souce however the
> DIS> occasional one will provide custom profiles, in most cases sRGB will
> DIS> be adequte. But often printer profiles for newer colour ink-jet
> DIS> printers are wider than sRGB or Adobe RGB so choosing either of these
> DIS> colourspaces as your source or workspace or finally converting to
> DIS> either during save may reduce the potential quality of your prints.
> 
> So the best would be to create a color profile of my printer (I don't
> have a printer yet) with PrintFIX or something similar and convert to
> that profile just before printing. This way I could be sure that I use
> the printer at it's best possible quality.
> 
> --
> Attila
> 
> 
> 

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