Introduction, How colors are represented, A summary of the color management process – HP Designjet T1300 ePrinter User Manual

Page 94: Color calibration

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Introduction

Your printer has been engineered with advanced hardware and software features to ensure predictable

and dependable results.

Color calibration for consistent colors.

One gray and two black inks provide neutral grays on all paper types.

The Photo Black ink provides pure blacks when printing on photo papers.

Color emulation of other HP Designjet printers.

How colors are represented

All devices that display color use a color model to represent color in numerical terms. Most monitors

use the RGB (Red-Green-Blue) color model, while most printers use the CMYK (Cyan-Magenta-Yellow-

blacK) color model.

An image can be converted from one color model to another, but in general the conversion is not

perfect. Your printer uses the RGB color model: the same color model that is used by your monitor.

This simplifies but does not completely solve the problem of matching colors. Each device represents

colors a little differently from another device, even if they use the same color model. However, software

can adjust the colors in an image according to the characteristics of the particular device, using a color

profile of the device, in order to achieve correct colors.

A summary of the color management process

To get the accurate and consistent colors that you want, you should follow these steps for each paper

type that you use.

1.

Color-calibrate the paper type, for consistent colors. Calibration should be repeated every now

and then (see

Color calibration on page 86

). In addition, you may wish to calibrate

immediately before a particularly important print job for which color consistency is vital.

2.

When printing, select the correct color preset for the paper type you are using.

Color calibration

Color calibration enables your printer to produce consistent colors with the particular printheads, inks

and paper type that you are using, and under your particular environmental conditions. After color

calibration, you can expect to get similar prints from any two different printers situated in different

geographical locations.

Some paper types cannot be calibrated. For all other paper types, calibration should be done in any of

the following circumstances:

Whenever a printhead is replaced

Whenever a new paper type is introduced that has not yet been calibrated with the current set of

printheads

Whenever the environmental conditions (temperature and humidity) change significantly

86

Chapter 10 Color management

ENWW

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