F. Todd Wilson <> wrote:
> I've had an Olympus E10 for a while, enjoying it a lot. Got a Canon
> i950 printer for prints, excellent quality. One problem: the prints
> invariably come out darker than the images appear on the screen. Can
> someone help me figure out why?
For starters, prints are going to be perceptually darker than your screen,
and cannot reproduce the same range as your screen.
> The PowerBook brightness is at the max, but the screen is uncalibrated
Well, that's a clue.
> (I know someday I should, but I'm hoping I can fix this problem without
> going there first).
Make your screen darker, or your pictures lighter.
You're using Colorsync without a calibrated monitor; this is not going to
lead you to true-color salvation. Indeed, with the brightness turned all
the way up, it's going to guarantee that your prints are darker than what
you see on your screen, because what you see on your screen is brighter
than it should be, but the system is assuming that you're looking at a
calibrated monitor.
> The default profile for the PowerBook is the one selected: should I
> change it to something else, perhaps the same as the camera?
No, you need a monitor profile. You can either generate one by calibrating
your monitor; or, you can not calibrate your monitor, look at the difference
between your monitor and your prints, figure out an adjustment you can do in
Photoshop that will get your prints looking like you see them on the screen
(the reverse of the difference between the monitor and the print), and apply
that adjustment every time you make a print.
--
Jeremy |