HP DesignJet T7200 Using Your Printer - Page 103

Rendering intent, Perform black point compensation, Printing PANTONE swatch books

Page 103 highlights

If you leave an option set to Default, the setting saved in the job will be used. If the job contains no setting, the front-panel setting in the printer will be used. ● Color/Grayscale: you can choose to print in color, in shades of gray or in pure black and white. ● Default RGB source profile: you can choose from a selection of RGB source profiles recognized by the printer. ● Printer emulation: you can choose to emulate a different HP DesignJet printer. Default: Off (no printer emulation). PostScript or PDF jobs only ● Default CMYK source profile: you can choose from a selection of CMYK source profiles recognized by the printer. Default: Europe ISO Coated FOGRA27. ● Rendering intent: you can select the rendering intent. ● Black point compensation: you can turn black point compensation on or off. ● HP Professional PANTONE Emulation: you can turn HP Professional PANTONE Emulation on or off. Rendering intent Rendering intent is one of the settings used when doing a color transformation. As you probably know, some of the colors you want to print may not be reproducible by the printer. The rendering intent allows you to select one of four different ways of handling these so-called out-of-gamut colors. ● Saturation (graphics): best used for presentation graphics, charts or images made up of bright, saturated colors. ● Perceptual (images): best used for photographs or images in which colors blend together. It tries to preserve the overall color appearance. ● Relative colorimetric (proofing): best used when you want to match a particular color. This method is mainly used for proofing. It guarantees that, if a color can be printed accurately, it will be printed accurately. The other methods will probably provide a more pleasing range of colors but do not guarantee that any particular color will be printed accurately. It maps the white of the input space to the white of the paper on which you are printing. ● Absolute colorimetric (proofing): the same as relative colorimetric, but without mapping the white. This rendering is also used mainly for proofing, where the goal is to simulate the output of one printer (including its white point). Perform black point compensation The black point compensation option controls whether to adjust for differences in black points when converting colors between color spaces. When this option is selected, the full dynamic range of the source space is mapped into the full dynamic range of the destination space. It can be very useful in preserving shadows when the black point of the source space is darker than that of the destination space. This option is allowed only when the Relative colorimetric rendering intent is selected (see Rendering intent on page 95). Printing PANTONE swatch books You can use the Embedded Web Server to print a swatch book showing emulations of PANTONE colors as made by your printer, together with a measure of the color difference (ΔE) between each emulation and the original PANTONE spot color. ENWW Color management from the Embedded Web Server 95

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If you leave an option set to
Default
, the setting saved in the job will be used. If the job contains no setting, the
front-panel setting in the printer will be used.
Color/Grayscale
: you can choose to print in color, in shades of gray or in pure black and white.
Default RGB source profile
: you can choose from a selection of RGB source profiles recognized by the
printer.
Printer emulation
: you can choose to emulate a different HP DesignJet printer. Default:
Off
(no printer
emulation).
PostScript or PDF jobs only
Default CMYK source profile
: you can choose from a selection of CMYK source profiles recognized by the
printer. Default:
Europe ISO Coated FOGRA27
.
Rendering intent
: you can select the rendering intent.
Black point compensation
: you can turn black point compensation on or off.
HP Professional PANTONE Emulation
: you can turn HP Professional PANTONE Emulation on or off.
Rendering intent
Rendering intent is one of the settings used when doing a color transformation. As you probably know, some of
the colors you want to print may not be reproducible by the printer. The rendering intent allows you to select one
of four different ways of handling these so-called out-of-gamut colors.
Saturation (graphics)
: best used for presentation graphics, charts or images made up of bright, saturated
colors.
Perceptual (images)
: best used for photographs or images in which colors blend together. It tries to
preserve the overall color appearance.
Relative colorimetric (proofing)
: best used when you want to match a particular color. This method is mainly
used for proofing. It guarantees that, if a color can be printed accurately, it will be printed accurately. The
other methods will probably provide a more pleasing range of colors but do not guarantee that any
particular color will be printed accurately. It maps the white of the input space to the white of the paper on
which you are printing.
Absolute colorimetric (proofing)
: the same as relative colorimetric, but without mapping the white. This
rendering is also used mainly for proofing, where the goal is to simulate the output of one printer (including
its white point).
Perform black point compensation
The black point compensation option controls whether to adjust for differences in black points when converting
colors between color spaces. When this option is selected, the full dynamic range of the source space is mapped
into the full dynamic range of the destination space. It can be very useful in preserving shadows when the black
point of the source space is darker than that of the destination space. This option is allowed only when the
Relative colorimetric
rendering intent is selected (see
Rendering intent
on page
95
).
Printing PANTONE swatch books
You can use the Embedded Web Server to print a swatch book showing emulations of PANTONE colors as made
by your printer, together with a measure of the color difference (ΔE) between each emulation and the original
PANTONE spot color.
ENWW
Color management from the Embedded Web Server
95