Hi Cor, > Hi Christoph and Louis > > I was confused too, so I spoke again with people in the printshop. Why does > my > pdf not print well? (yes Christoph, I had used 'printer' in the pdf color > settings). > They told me that if they would do the job, they would first 'translate' a > jpg file to contain CYMK information (with photoshop they said). This jpg > file would go into Xpress and a good pdf is the result. Sorry for my somewhat > criptic last part in the first e-mail. > I do not understand why they to this separate translation. Does Xpress not > create a pdf with colors in the CYMK colorspace?
From what you wrote, it seems to me they want a CMYK colour profile embedded in the file. You can do this in scribus in the properties palette, provided you have such a profile. If you don't need brilliant colours, you can also try sRGB, which normally translates easily to CMYK. It's not what I would recommend generally, but just in case ... > So I am looking how to translate (RGB)?- jpg (stemming from a scanned > photograph) to CYMK-jpg. I understand that it should go well with the > 'printer' button in the pdf color settings. Yes, it should ;) > I will experiment with the tiff format (from GIMP) and the possibility I saw > in Photoshop to choose for CYMK there In current GIMP, you can't work in the CMYK colour space, neither can you apply any profiles. These features will be available in the next version (2.4). But if you don't need to edit your file, scribus is your friend. You can attach a profile to the image, do the gamut check and let scribus do the conversion when exporting to PDF. groeten, Christoph
