Yes, I got really confused when you posted that Keith because I thought (rightly so) that all ink jet printers were CMYK, and they merely translated RGB to CMYK ink colors.. Wouldn't it be more accurate to just work in photoshop in CMYK and then print it to a CMYK printer?
I keep getting errors on my paint swatch that say (triangle) "Warning: Out of gamut for printing."
If the printer can print a certain color like pure blue for its nozzle check, why can't it print that color from a photoshop image?
8-[
I never understood (and still don't) all the color management and translation policies.
On 1/11/2012 11:42 AM, Keith E. wrote:
Which is what you said, now that I reread the post. Point being,
though, you should be working in RGB if your output is to be
printed using an inkjet printer.
On Wed, 11 Jan 2012 12:52:02 -0500, Keith E. <kje@voyager.net>
wrote:
>Yes, they use CMYK ink, but they accept RGB data values and convert
>them to CMYK in the printer.
>
>On Tue, 10 Jan 2012 21:20:15 -1000, Don
><y-groups.96705@hawaiiantel.net> wrote:
>
>>Keith:
>>
>>ALL inkjet printers use CMYK ink. The printer manufacturer supplies a driver which only accepts an RGB image and converts it to CMYK as part of the rasterizing process.
--
Keith E.
Excrementum casus
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