Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2015/03/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Bob, I'm no expert and there are a million ways to screw this up...and I'm not a user of Eizo equipment (yet) and I haven't used an I1 in awhile but.... You have to have a good monitor to begin with. You have to make sure that the monitor is set to the default profile before you callibrate. Choose the native white point for your monitor. You have to make sure that your imaging software/hardware supports the version of profile that your profiler creates. This one tripped me up a lot in the past...Version 4 or Version 2 Make sure that your photo software is set to use your monitor profile. Soft proof with your paper profile for your printer that came from the paper manufacturer. Or use the profile that your make of your paper to match your monitor. When you print you have to make sure that you aren't double profiling in your photo software and your print driver. It is easy to screw up here. Make sure that you use your paper settings correctly. Your prints ought to be close. Your monitor profile lets your know what your images should look like. Your printer/paper profile tells the printer how to get there. If you do all this, you should be close. If it didn't work, there is something wrong with either the way you did it or something wrong with your equipment. Changing your monitor to match the print output is not the way to go. It screws up your baseline. That said, if it works for you, good. But it doesn't work for me. Leo Wesson Photographer/Videographer 817.733.9157 www.leowesson.com >