HP (Hewlett-Packard) Z6200 Photo Printer User Manual


 
Color management example with Photoshop
In this example, you have an Adobe RGB image that you want to print from Photoshop. There are three
ways of doing it.
Select Let Photoshop determine colors in Photoshop. Select Application-Managed
Colors in the printer driver. Color management is done in Photoshop. This is the recommended
way.
Select Let printer determine colors in Photoshop. Select Printer-Managed Colors and the
sRGB profile in the printer driver. Photoshop converts the image from Adobe RGB to sRGB and
sends it to the printer. Color management is done in the printer. Unfortunately, conversion to sRGB
results in a loss of gamut, but Photoshop cannot be prevented from converting to sRGB when Let
printer determine colors is selected.
Select No color management in Photoshop. Select Printer-Managed Colors and the
AdobeRGB profile in the printer driver. Photoshop does not perform any conversion, there is no
loss of gamut, and color management is done in the printer. However, this method will not work if
you are using synchronized color management in Photoshop (see below).
Synchronized color management with Photoshop
If you are using Adobe Photoshop CS2 for Mac OS, or Adobe Photoshop CS3 for Windows, or later
versions, the color management options can be automatically synchronized between Photoshop and the
driver.
If you select Let Photoshop determine colors or No color management in Photoshop,
Application-Managed Colors is automatically selected in the driver.
If you select Let printer determine colors in Photoshop, Printer-Managed Colors is
automatically selected in the driver. The PostScript driver will use the color profile attached to the
job by Photoshop.
To enable this Photoshop synchronization under Windows XP, you must download and install the
following free software packages from Microsoft's Web site:
Microsoft Core XML Services (MSXML) 6.0
Microsoft XML Paper Specification Essentials Pack 1.0
Color-adjustment options
The aim of color management is to print accurate colors. If you perform color management correctly,
then you should be able to print accurate colors with no need of any manual color adjustments.
However, manual adjustments may be useful in the following situations:
If your color management is not working correctly for some reason
If you want colors that are subjectively pleasing rather than accurate
The printer driver provides different adjustment facilities depending on whether you are printing in color
or in grayscale. If you are printing in pure black and white, there are no color adjustment options.
ENWW
Color-adjustment options
105
Color management