

Now, that’s not so hard to understand, is it? ColorSync takes care of color matching automatically.” Matching color from one device to another can be extremely difficult and time-consuming. “Devices such as scanners, displays, digital cameras, and printers each handle color differently. So Apple, of course, came up with its own color management system and called it “ColorSync.” The resulting ICC profiles allow for matching colors when moving between applications, operating systems and devices.Īnd this system is supposed to match the colors between your monitor and printer. The ICC developed a vendor-neutral color management system (CMS) that would work across operating systems and software. Keeping the world safe from out-of-control color. They created the ICC, which stands for International Color Consortium.

How does your computer translate its RGB color road map to your CMYK photo printer?īack in 1993, some big-brain folks tackled the translation problem. So it’s up to you to teach your display how it should look. Unsupervised, your computer screen will continue to display its own evolving versions of reality. So if that’s the case, your fabulous looking picture will always look different everywhere else in the universe, including on your prints.Īll computer monitors and TVs natively display their images with slight or sometimes significant differences.Īnd to make the problem worse, their base color and luminance levels will drift over time as they age. Your monitor may not be perfectly adjusted. Yes, it may not be your printer’s fault at all. So how many levels of color translation do you have to get through before your printer even starts its dance? (which would seem to make the color translation from my computer to printer even more confusing!)Īnd to further complicate matters, many CMYK ink printers actually operate in RGB mode.
#How to make my printer print clearly plus
My Epson Artisan has four CMYK ink cartridges, plus a light cyan and a light magenta cartridge So how does one color language talk to the other?
