HP DesignJet T2500 User guide - Page 116

Color management from printer drivers, Color management options

Page 116 highlights

3. The chart is scanned and measured. 4. From the measurements, the printer calculates the necessary correction factors to apply for consistent color printing on that paper type. It also calculates the maximum amount of each ink that can be applied to the paper. Color management from printer drivers Color management options The aim of color management is to reproduce colors as accurately as possible on all devices: so that, when you print an image, you see very similar colors as when you view the same image on your monitor. There are two basic approaches to color management for your printer: ● Application-Managed Colors: in this case your application program must convert the colors of your image to the color space of your printer and paper type, using the ICC profile embedded in the image and the ICC profile of your printer and paper type. ● Printer-Managed Colors: in this case your application program sends your image to the printer without any color conversion, and the printer converts the colors to its own color space. The details of this process depend on the graphics language that you are using. ◦ PostScript (PostScript printers): the PostScript interpreter module performs the color conversion using the profiles stored in the printer and any additional profiles sent with the PostScript job. This kind of color management is done when you are using the PostScript driver and you specify printer color management or when you send a PostScript, PDF, TIFF or JPEG file directly to the printer through the Embedded Web Server. In either case you have to select the profiles to use as default (in case the job doesn't specify any) and the rendering intent to apply. ◦ Non-PostScript (PCL3GUI, HP-GL/2): the color management is done using a set of stored color tables. ICC profiles are not used. This method is somewhat less versatile than the alternatives, but is a little simpler and faster, and can produce good results with standard HP paper types. This kind of color management is done when you are using a non-PostScript driver and you specify printer color management, or when you send a PCL3GUI or HP-GL/2 file directly to the printer through the Embedded Web Server. NOTE: There are only two color spaces that the printer can convert to its own color space using the stored color tables: Adobe RGB and sRGB if you are using Windows, Adobe RGB and ColorSync if you are using Mac OS X. ColorSync is the Mac OS X built-in Color Management System; so, when you select ColorSync, color management is performed by Mac OS X, and it is done based on the ICC profiles of the specified paper type. ColorSync can be selected from the Color Matching panel. You are recommended to consult the HP Support Center (see HP Support Center on page 241) to see how to use the color management options of your particular application. To choose between Application-Managed Colors and Printer-Managed Colors: ● In the Windows driver dialog: select the Color tab. ● In the Mac OS X Print dialog: select the Color Options panel. ● In some applications: you can make this choice in the application. 106 Chapter 13 Color management ENWW

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3.
The chart is scanned and measured.
4.
From the measurements, the printer calculates the necessary correction factors to apply for consistent
color printing on that paper type. It also calculates the maximum amount of each ink that can be applied
to the paper.
Color management from printer drivers
Color management options
The aim of color management is to reproduce colors as accurately as possible on all devices: so that, when
you print an image, you see very similar colors as when you view the same image on your monitor.
There are two basic approaches to color management for your printer:
Application-Managed Colors
: in this case your application program must convert the colors of your
image to the color space of your printer and paper type, using the ICC profile embedded in the image
and the ICC profile of your printer and paper type.
Printer-Managed Colors
: in this case your application program sends your image to the printer without
any color conversion, and the printer converts the colors to its own color space. The details of this
process depend on the graphics language that you are using.
PostScript (PostScript printers):
the PostScript interpreter module performs the color conversion
using the profiles stored in the printer and any additional profiles sent with the PostScript job. This
kind of color management is done when you are using the PostScript driver and you specify printer
color management or when you send a PostScript, PDF, TIFF or JPEG file directly to the printer
through the Embedded Web Server. In either case you have to select the profiles to use as default
(in case the job doesn't specify any) and the rendering intent to apply.
Non-PostScript (PCL3GUI, HP-GL/2):
the color management is done using a set of stored color
tables. ICC profiles are not used. This method is somewhat less versatile than the alternatives, but
is a little simpler and faster, and can produce good results with standard HP paper types. This kind
of color management is done when you are using a non-PostScript driver and you specify printer
color management, or when you send a PCL3GUI or HP-GL/2 file directly to the printer through the
Embedded Web Server.
NOTE:
There are only two color spaces that the printer can convert to its own color space using
the stored color tables: Adobe RGB and sRGB if you are using Windows, Adobe RGB and ColorSync
if you are using Mac OS X.
ColorSync is the Mac OS X built-in Color Management System; so, when you select ColorSync, color
management is performed by Mac OS X, and it is done based on the ICC profiles of the specified
paper type.
ColorSync can be selected from the
Color Matching
panel.
You are recommended to consult the HP Support Center (see
HP Support Center
on page
241
) to see how to
use the color management options of your particular application.
To choose between
Application-Managed Colors
and
Printer-Managed Colors
:
In the Windows driver dialog:
select the
Color
tab.
In the Mac OS X Print dialog:
select the
Color Options
panel.
In some applications:
you can make this choice in the application.
106
Chapter 13
Color management
ENWW