fcca2f3a81 Para obtener ayuda, visite Asistencia de Adobe. If you set up the Conversion correctly, the monitor and printing proofing spaces will match (for all practical purposes) depending on the limits of technology. By "Calibration Target" I mean the image (typically a mosaic tile of color patches) your profiling package prints so your colorimeter can read each patch individually and generate a custom ICC printing profile I do not mean the PDI reference images. This means "Photoshop" Adobe (ACE) Color Management System (CMS-CMM) will perform a SPECIFIC Source-Profile to Print-Profile Conversion as faithfully as Photoshop displays it on the monitor through a Source-Profile> Monitor-Profile Conversion. Click them on/off at will to see your likely result.
Page 2 - Photoshop - Colour Spaces . Color Management Policies: These describe how the application handles colour management when you open an image, particularly with regard to embedded profiles. RGB: Adobe RGB is suggested because of it's wide colour gamut, which many high-end cameras can use, and wide-gamut monitors can display almost all of its gamut. Version 4 ICC Profiles: If your are using v4 printing profiles, try Googling for more information.some symptoms of this bug are Photoshop prints a light cyan or blue in the page white areas. My Photoshop projects contain text and vector objects and I get 'acceptable' sharpness in those elements printing through the standard native Epson print drivers. Conversion Options: Engine:Adobe (ACE). Don't useMonitor RGB unless you will only ever create images to view on that monitor, and never print them, or send them to friends! CMYK:Normally only important if you are handling images for commercial printing, when it is very important! If you just click Image/Mode/CMYK this is the profile which will be used to do the conversion. Don't worry if you are not in Europe, or not in prepress, as they contain good general-purpose settings.
Sadeamm replied
448 weeks ago