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Saturday, January 4, 2014
List of Color Management Myths
List of Color Management Myths
This is a partial list of common misconceptions about color management.
Myth #1:
Color Management is not useful in CMYK-only workflows
Myth #2:
There is some internal Lab/Color reference that the output of printers is compared to when profiling.
Myth #3:
The gamut of RGB is larger than CMYK.
Myth #4:
A profile is for calibration
Myth #5:
5000K on a monitor is the same as 5000K in a light booth.
Myth #6:
You need to be a color scientist to use color management
Myth #7:
Setup Photoshop with your monitor profile as the working space.
Myth #8:
Use perceptual intent for all Photographic-style images
Myth #9:
The Saturation rendering intent sucks.
Myth #10:
Profile Rot or "A good profile gone bad"
Myth #11:
Printing a profiling target is a good way to evaluate a profile.
Myth #12:
CMYKLcLm printers are 6 color.
Myth #13:
Look at a print closely to see the color better.
Myth #14:
CRT Brightness & Contrast knobs control Brightness and Contrast.
Myth #15:
LCD brightness IS brightness which means it's not the same as a CRT.
Myth #16:
Two 5000K bulbs will match.
Myth #17:
D50 bulbs are available.
Myth #18:
The "Preserve Color Numbers" checkbox in Photoshop's proof setup doesn't matter much.
Myth #19:
You need a RIP for your printer if you want to proof.
Myth #20:
Adobe Gamma is pretty close to what you can get from an instrument calibration.
Myth #21:
There are perceptual rendering intents available when converting from scanner/camera->workspace or workspace->workspace.
Myth #22:
The a, b axis of Lab are red/green and blue/yellow.
Myth #23:
Photoshop's color setting dialog lets you edit an ICC CMYK profile.
Myth #24:
Working space selection in Photoshop affects profile building.
Myth #25:
Device link profiles are limited, hard-coded versions of normal ICC transforms and are therefore redundant, inflexible and are to be avoided.
Myth #26:
Graphing profiles to see their gamut gives pretty much the same results in the different tools that are available.
Myth #27:
Why would anyone ever want to choose a working space that is larger than you can print?
Myth #28:
The PowerBook G4 displays 16.7 million colors (or any display, for that matter).
Myth #29:
The more patches on the printer target, the better the resulting profile.
Myth #30:
If your RIP doesn't allow total ink limiting, just limit each channel.
Myth #31:
When setting up a RIP for proofing, you should match density and dot gain of the inkjet to the press.
Myth #32:
Relative Colorimetric intent means no color shift.
Myth #33:
The new SWOP guide (version 10) contains an effective summary of color management.
G7 Myths:
G7 Myths.
Myth #35:
Wide gamut monitors are the best! Everybody should have one.
Myth #36:
A wide gamut monitor will show me all the colors my printer can print.
Myth #37:
Lab is perceptually uniform
Myth #38:
Delta E 2000 is not a good equation to choose; I've heard that xxx is better.
Myth #39:
Curve3 will make my printer print GRACoL.
ColorWiki Home
Color Management Tab
See Also
Setting Advanced Job Properties
Setting Dither Options for Angled Screens
Setting Advanced Color Correction Properties
Layout Tab
Workflow Tab
Printer Options Tab
Cut Tab
Tile Tab
Labels and Marks Tab
Color Adjustment Tab
Separations Tab
Object Color Control Tab
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