so i set up the Spyder3 today. It set the brightness to about 191, sid
the ambient light in my room was veryu high/. The monitor is quit
bright now, iMac 21.5" and i tried a sample print again. Still coming
out quit a bit darker than screen. Do i need to adjust the monitor
brightness now to a lower out put or will that effect my calibrartion
done,

I'm quite confused now as it had been printing out close to monitor
for a while. Maybe i should do a Walmart or Henrys kiosk print as a
double check

Dave

On Fri, Sep 2, 2016 at 9:46 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Sep 2, 2016, at 10:53 AM, David J Brooks <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> I have purchased a new in box Spyderpro 3 as it will work with 10.6.8,
>> supposedly. I am having trouble matching the brightness on my iMac
>> 21.5" screen to the print outs from my Epson 2400. The prints are
>> coming out quite a bit darker than what i see on my screen via LR
>> version 4.1. Should this help with my woes or will it just help with
>> the colours. This one has the ambient reciver.
>
>
> If your prints are dark compared to the rendering you see on the display, it 
> means you are doing your adjustments with a display set to too bright/too 
> high a luminance value. The logic here is that if the display is set to too 
> high a luminance (or the room is too dark relative to the display luminance), 
> your adjustments are being made with your eye fooled into thinking that that 
> is the correct (darker) illumination level. As a result, when you send the 
> image to the printer, the printer prints it to match what it thinks is the 
> display illumination, which is too dark. (Conversely, if your display is set 
> too dim in too bright a room, your prints will come out too light.)
>
> I don't know the Spyder Pro 3 software, I use the Xrite i1 Profiler software 
> with the Xrite i1 Display Pro colorimeter. But they should all do similar 
> types of things.
>
> All of these calibration utilities depend upon a 'normal' room illumination 
> to work correctly. My office where I do image processing is illuminated to 
> low reading level … about ISO 100 @ f/2 @ 1/4 to 1/2 second if I do an 
> incident reading at my desk. Because that's a little low, I set the 
> calibration *target* for my display to 100 cdm^2. That's the first phase of 
> the calibration procedure. Once the illumination is set, the software then 
> runs tests and adjusts the display color mix to achieve my other two targets: 
> 5600°K white point and 1.8 gamma. With the display then set to the 
> calibration targets, it writes a display calibration profile which is 
> installed into the macOS at the appropriate location in the file system, and 
> sets the system to use that calibration profile.
>
> With that setup in my system, the display at first appears a little bit dim 
> and a little warm in color. However, what comes out of the printer is a very 
> close match to what I see on the screen, which is my goal in a profiled 
> printing workflow.
>
> So: the display calibration system certainly helps get my prints coming out 
> the right density and color presuming that it is used correctly. I can't 
> imagine this would be any different for the Spyder Pro system.
>
>> R2400 is set to SPR2400 Premglossy Bstphoto.icc
>> Perceptual
>>
>> Colour management in the print settings is greyed out but shows Colorsync
>
> If you have selected a paper profile for color managed printing, Lightroom 
> automatically locks out the ability to use EPSON Color Controls in the Color 
> Matching section of the print driver interface. (The reason the grayed out 
> controls show ColorSync enabled is that Lightroom uses ColorSync's ability to 
> interpret the paper profile to drive the color matching.) If you were to set 
> Lightroom to use Printer Managed color instead of selecting a paper profile, 
> the Color Matching section of the driver would give you a choice between 
> picking a ColorSync delivered paper profile or using the explicit EPSON Color 
> Controls in the Printer Settings section of the print driver.
>
>> Mark R :: OK, ColorSync may be a means of implementing ICC profiles then.
>
> ColorSync isn't a means of "implementing ICC profiles." It's the underlying 
> rendering engine that ICC profiles are interpreted with. If you set LR to let 
> the printer manage color, and pick the EPSON Color Controls, the print driver 
> bypasses the ColorSync rendering engine and uses its own, Epson-supplied, 
> color rendering engine which is based upon the paper chosen and the settings 
> you make in the Basic|Advanced Color Controls sections of the Print Settings 
> panel.
>
> But this is a little beside the point. The issue is that the balance of 
> ambient and display illumination isn't correct … the display is too bright 
> relative to the ambient illumination, which causes adjustments to be skewed 
> to the dark side when the numbers are sent to the printer.
>
> -
> Unfortunately, Paul Stenqvist's instructions regards how the print driver 
> dialogs work for Photoshop are not correct for printing from Lightroom. 
> They're very different applications with regard to printing.
>
> How to print from macOS with Lightroom:
>
> 0) Calibrate and profile your display. This is step 0 because you do it 
> outside of LR and only do it once.
>
> Now, in Lightroom and unlike in Photoshop, there is no "Edit > Color 
> Settings" dialog to set up all the various color working space, etc, stuff. 
> Lightroom was not designed as a general purpose graphics application, it was 
> designed exclusively for photography, so it automatically sets the default 
> working color space for editing to ProPhoto RGB and 16bit per component. You 
> bring your raw, JPEG, PNG, or TIFF files into Lightroom and they are 
> automatically promoted to 16bit for editing in ProPhoto RGB colorspace. You 
> only need to make color management settings for export or for printing, in 
> either the Export dialog or the Print dialog.
>
> In Export, the only option you have is what target color space profile you 
> want embedded into the image.
>
> In the Print module, the color management is controlled by a combination of 
> the Page Setup and Print Settings dialogs, which in turn depend upon the 
> specific printer/print driver that you choose, in conjunction with the Print 
> Job panel settings.
>
> 1) Select a photo to print and go to the Print module
> 2) Click Page Setup at the bottom of the left panel
>
> Pick the printer you are going to use, the paper type and feed type, and the 
> orientation and scaling. Click OK.
>
> 3) Work your way down the right hand panels (Layout Style, Image Settings, 
> and Layout primarily) to determine how you want the photo to image onto the 
> paper.
>
> Now you're ready to set up the print job and print settings.
>
> 4) In the Print Job panel, first set up the output to go to the printer.
> 5) Skipping the output resolution and other bits that should be self-evident, 
> in the Color Management section either pick "Managed by Printer" to use the 
> print driver's rendering engine, or pick a paper profile for a color-managed 
> printing workflow.
>
> Different options apply if using color-managed printing or "managed by 
> printer" workflows. In either case, however, once you pick one, click Print 
> Settings on the lower left to set up the print driver for that workflow mode. 
> Different options apply for different printers and are supplied by the 
> printer driver so there's no easy way to walk through all of the 
> possibilities.
>
> 6) Once everything is done and the setup is complete in the Print Settings 
> dialog, click OK.
>
> At this point your back in Lightroom, ready to print. Before you print, 
> however, use Print > New Template to create a printing preset with all those 
> settings in it. This way in the future, all you have to do when printing the 
> same size prints on the same printer is select the photos you want and select 
> the printing preset.
>
> 7) Send images to the printer by clicking Print at the bottom of the right 
> panel.
>
> Printing is never simple.
> -
>
> But the fundamental problem is the display calibration, far as I can make 
> out. Address that and you should be good to go.
>
> G
> —
> The trouble with being punctual is that nobody's there to appreciate it.
>
>
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