Hi,
On Thu, 2006-09-28 at 08:07 -0400, John R. Culleton wrote:
> But there is perhaps a way to do it. If a display function can be
> added to Gimp whereby a double conversion is done, from RGB to
> CMYK and back again, then the user could view the illo in Gimp
> with the gamut limited to what it
On Thursday 28 September 2006 08:31, Rob Ogle wrote:
> John,
>
> I'm the OP'er...since I'm a network tech and not a graphic designer I want
> to make sure I understand what I'm getting from these posts before I go
> back to the designer. When you wrote, "...will need to understand its
> limitations
it. I like to promote it as much as possible.
Rob Ogle, MCSE
Computer Server Solutions, inc
http://www.css1.cc
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of John R.
Culleton
Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2006 8:07 AM
To: Øyvind Kolås
Cc: gimp-user@lists.xcf.b
On Wednesday 27 September 2006 18:03, Øyvind Kolås wrote:
>
> Color management support is improved in the latest development
> versions of GIMP, this is not the same as editing in CMYK mode, but it
> should be the thing more than 90% of the people asking for CMYK needs,
> even though they think it
On 9/27/06, John R. Culleton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Photoshop and the free programs TeX, Scribus, Inkscape, Krita
etc. can work in the CMYK color model. Gimp only works in RGB.
CMYK has a more limited range of colors than RGB. Printers, both> --
desktop and four color commercial work in CMYK.
On Sunday 24 September 2006 10:46, Rob Ogle wrote:
> I'm trying to get a wedding chapel to move away from Photoshop and start
> using the Gimp. They are almost on board except for a printing issue. If we
> print a photo from Photoshop to an Epson Stylus 2200 the photo looks great.
> But when we pri