Printer profiles.

swiftflo

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I have just got myself a ColorMunki to set up my monitor. I have been told that I need to get my printer icc profiles corrected. My printer is a Canon ix6550 and I haven't a clue as to printer profiles, anyone help me please.
 
A printer profile characterises your printer+ink+paper combination. It tells the printing program what colours the combination can print and those it can't. This enables the software to produce acceptable prints.

Now without going into to much detail, you need to get profiles for your printer. You can have them made specially for you or you can used manufacturers " Canned" profiles. These Canned" profiles are generic but in many instances are good enough for most people.

Now if you are using Canon materials you should be able to get them from canon's web site, if they were not provided with the printer itself. If you are using another manufactures paper, such as Ilford, you'll need to go to Ilford's web site for the profiles. .

Now how you use them is usually dependant on the program you are using. If it's Photoshop, then simply Google " Printer profiles in Photoshop" and you'll get several useful links
 
Which ColorMunki did you buy? If it's the ColorMunki Photo it'll do printer profiling as well. (The ColorMunki Display won't profile printers).
 
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Which ColorMunki did you buy? If it's the ColorMunki Photo it'll do printer profiling as well. (The ColorMunki Display won't profile printers).

It is the ColorMunki Display.
 
As has been said, if you use genuine Canon inks and papers, the printer driver's built in profiles work very well and when using Ilford Galerie, I find that the built in glossy or matt options do a very good job too - if you find they're not right, you can make your own profiles in the driver and save them for future use. Remember that a print will never match your monitor exactly - the way the print looks depends on the light source, so one that looks great in tungsten light may look poor in fluorescent and natural.

On the subject of inks, I would only use genuine inks. 3rd party ones aren't as consistent, give dodgy colours, fade faster and can clog the print head. It might be tempting to save a few quid but if you have the problems I did, it's a very false economy - the ink used to flush the cr*p ink out coupled with the time factor made it an expensive mistake!
 
As has been said, if you use genuine Canon inks and papers, the printer driver's built in profiles work very well and when using Ilford Galerie, I find that the built in glossy or matt options do a very good job too - if you find they're not right, you can make your own profiles in the driver and save them for future use. Remember that a print will never match your monitor exactly - the way the print looks depends on the light source, so one that looks great in tungsten light may look poor in fluorescent and natural.

On the subject of inks, I would only use genuine inks. 3rd party ones aren't as consistent, give dodgy colours, fade faster and can clog the print head. It might be tempting to save a few quid but if you have the problems I did, it's a very false economy - the ink used to flush the cr*p ink out coupled with the time factor made it an expensive mistake!

Sorry to say I don't use Canon inks in my Canon printer. I have used inks from IJT for a number of years now and(touch wood) have had no problems.
On the subject of cost I once reckoned up the cost of Canon inks and I think they were around one and a half times as much as I pay per set.

I do use Ilford Galerie Prestige papers.
 
Lucky you! How are the prints today when compared to brand new ones?
 
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