> You say you just have your printer profiled at the moment...not the scanner > though? IMHO, I would start with the first element in the chain - the > scanner/digital camera (assuming you're okay with the monitor at the > moment). > This would explain why when you've played around with Adobe RGB and > Colormatch RGB spaces, you did not get the results you were hoping for.
Choosing to profile my printer first was a question of priority as I had nearly 100 prints to produce for a couple of shows. The results were great and the files that I had scanned in required very little tweaking. > > If clients are happy - then fine, no problem...all the above simply explores > a way of maybe improving on what you do already... Indeed. To prove a point to myself, I opened up several scans that had been sent to me by my agency of work I had stored there on film. The scans were truly shocking and not nearly as good as the meagre offerings that i have been producing myself, so thanks to this fine list I already feel that I have managed to edge further up the butter-slippy slope of dig without sliding too far back down. Thanks to all... Andy -- Andy Johnstone Photography Member of the Association of Photographers (UK) =============================================================== GO TO http://www.prodig.org for ~ GUIDELINES ~ un/SUBSCRIBING ~ ITEMS for SALE
