Oki C7300 C7100/C7300/C7500 User's Guide: Macintosh - Page 132

Perceptual, Saturation, Relative Colorimetric, Rendering Intent

Page 132 highlights

the printer's color gamut are printed without any modification, and only colors that fall outside the printable colors are modified. Rendering Intent When a document is printed, a conversion takes place from the document's color space to the printer color space. The rendering intents are essentially a set of rules that determine how this color conversion takes place. 1. Select the option desired. Auto The best default select as this selects the optimal settings for a general office environment. Perceptual Best choice for printing photographs. Compresses the source gamut into the printer's gamut whilst maintaining the overall appearance of an image. This may change the overall appearance of an image as all the colors are shifted together. Saturation Best choice for printing bright and saturated colors if you don't necessarily care how accurate the colors are. This makes it the recommended choice for graphs, charts, diagrams etc. Maps fully saturated colors in the source gamut to fully saturated colors in the printer's gamut. Relative Colorimetric Good for proofing CMYK color images on a desktop printer. Much like Absolute Colorimetric, except that it scales the source white to the (usually) paper white; i.e. unlike Absolute Colorimetric, this attempts to take the paper white into account. 132 > Macintosh OS 10.1.5 Operation

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132 > Macintosh OS 10.1.5 Operation
the printer's color gamut are printed without any modification, and
only colors that fall outside the printable colors are modified.
Rendering Intent
When a document is printed, a conversion takes place from the
document's color space to the printer color space. The rendering
intents are essentially a set of rules that determine how this color
conversion takes place.
1.
Select the option desired.
Auto
The best default select as this selects the optimal settings for a
general office environment.
Perceptual
Best choice for printing photographs. Compresses the source
gamut into the printer's gamut whilst maintaining the overall
appearance of an image. This may change the overall appearance
of an image as all the colors are shifted together.
Saturation
Best choice for printing bright and saturated colors if you don't
necessarily care how accurate the colors are. This makes it the
recommended choice for graphs, charts, diagrams etc. Maps fully
saturated colors in the source gamut to fully saturated colors in the
printer's gamut.
Relative Colorimetric
Good for proofing CMYK color images on a desktop printer. Much
like Absolute Colorimetric, except that it scales the source white to
the (usually) paper white; i.e. unlike Absolute Colorimetric, this
attempts to take the paper white into account.