Kyocera TASKalfa 4551ci Printing System (11),(12),(13),(14) Color Printing Gu - Page 23
RGB/Lab Rendering Intent, Enabled, Disabled Default, rendering intent, Best used for, Equivalent ICC
View all Kyocera TASKalfa 4551ci manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 23 highlights
COLORWISE PRINT OPTIONS 23 You can print a job with the Paper Simulation feature set to On from the printer driver without customizing paper simulation. Many jobs may print satisfactorily with the fixed default Paper Simulation setting. The Paper Simulation option has two settings: • Enabled: Performs Absolute Colorimetric rendering. • Disabled (Default): Performs Relative Colorimetric rendering. RGB/Lab Rendering Intent The RGB/Lab Rendering Intent option specifies a rendering intent for color conversions. To control the appearance of images, such as prints from office applications or RGB photographs from Photoshop, select the appropriate rendering intent. The E100 allows you to choose from the four rendering intents currently found in industry standard ICC profiles. E100 rendering intent Best used for Equivalent ICC rendering intent Photographic: Typically results in less saturated output than presentation rendering when printing out-of-gamut colors. This style preserves tonal relationships in images. Photographs, including scans and images from stock photography CDs and digital camera images. Image, Contrast, and Perceptual Presentation: Creates saturated colors but does not match printed colors precisely to displayed colors. In-gamut colors, such as flesh tones, are rendered well. This style is similar to the Photographic rendering intent. Artwork and graphs in presentations. In many cases, this style can be used for mixed pages that contain presentation graphics and photographs. Saturation, Graphics Relative Colorimetric: Provides white-point transformation between the source and destination white points. For example, the bluish white color (gray) of a monitor is replaced by paper white. This style avoids visible borders between blank spaces and white objects. Advanced use when color matching is important, but you prefer white colors in the document to print as paper white. This style may also be used with PostScript color management to affect CMYK data for simulation purposes. Relative Colorimetric Absolute Colorimetric: Provides no white point transformation between the source and destination white points. For example, the bluish white color (gray) is not replaced by paper white. Situations when exact colors are needed and visible borders are not distracting. This style may also be used with PostScript color management to affect CMYK data for simulation purposes. Absolute Colorimetric