> Yeh well thats not entirely logical either! ?You should be able to output to > an industry standard and then tell the printer here's a job thats in industry > standard format - use the printer specific profile built into the printer to > output the job adjusted for the printer.
The above statement makes me think you don't have the slightest idea about the problems with color management. First of all we have the colorspace. The colorspace tells which physical color (usually defined by CIELAB) a certain numerical value (as for example the RGB value of a pixel in a JPEG pictore) corresponds to. So for example a pixel with values RGB 12:34:56 is one color in sRGB, but a completely different color in for example AdobeRGB. Now, CIELAB contains all colors visible by the human eye (as far as I understand it), however other colorspaces contain only a subset. That means that for example the colorspace AdobeRGB contains some colors that CAN NOT be reproduced in the colorspace sRGB. The coverage of a certain colorspaceis called gamut, colors that can not be reproduced are "out of gamut" (and Scribus has support for showing you which colors are out of gamut for the end device, if you have correct profiles). Also RGB and CMYK are totally different. When you tell Scribus to produce a PDF for print, it creates a CMYK PDF. But from what you are writing (that your printer is using its built in profile) I think your printer wants RGB data, so you should create a PDF intended for screen (the only difference is RGB vs CMYK). This page doesn't cover everything, but is has links to further reading. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_management Color management is VERY complicated, and you have to make sure you understand which profiles are needed for which translation. I know enough about color management to understand that I shouldn't be using it yet... I need to learn more. /Peter
