Preparing the Image
Here's the best strategy if you know you'll want to print your final Photoshop image: Keep the printer in mind throughout the entire process! Different printers output differently, so knowing your printer enables you to adjust your image for its particular behavior and, thus, guarantee the best possible image on the final printed page. This is particularly true for full-color images.With that in mind, always configure Photoshop for the monitor and printer you'll be using, and do so before even considering printing anything important! This configuration involves several different areas: setting up monitors, printing inks, separations, and separation tables.Color management capabilities have become an important feature in Photoshop, and are managed by a collection of predefined settings for monitors and printers, and even print media. Each setting includes a corresponding color profile and conversion options, which should give you consistent color for a particular kind of printer under typical conditions. Color management is most helpful if you output your work to several printers or different kinds of printers, such as laser and imagesetter, or if your images will appear on the Web as well as in print and keeping the colors consistent from one kind of output to another is important to you.
Figure 23.7. The default color settings are for images that may be both printed and displayed on the Web.
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Figure 23.8. Choose an appropriate setting.
Customize It
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Working Spaces
The Working Spaces settings in the Color Settings dialog box are less complicated than they look (which is nice for a change). RGB asks for the monitor space you want to work in. Choose sRGB if you plan to share your images mostly onscreen, as web images or via email or slideshows; sRGB is a version of RGB that includes the colors that the standard computer monitor can display. If you will be printing most of your images, on the other hand, stick to Adobe RGB; it includes some printable colors that don't show up in sRGB.The CMYK field wants you to choose the kind of printer you're using. Again, if it's all Greek to you, choose Generic.Gray is easy. If you use a Mac, choose Gray Gamma 1.8. If you have a PC, choose 2.2. These are the basic settings for the method that each system uses to display grayscale images.Spot refers to pages printed with black and one or two spot colors, such as duotones, or illustrations done with black and white and limited PANTONE colors. The standard setting is Dot Gain 20%.
Color Management Policies
The Color Management Policies refer to how Photoshop handles files created in another application or in an earlier version of Photoshop. Your choices are to preserve the color management profiles embedded in the file, convert to your active mode, or turn off color management. This last choice lets Photoshop display the file in Active mode, while keeping the embedded profile, until you resave it with the new color management information. You can also direct Photoshop to warn you when a color management mismatch occurs as you open a file and ask what to do about it. Figure 23.9 shows a typical warning message.
Figure 23.9. This happened because I opened an image created in an older version of Photoshop.
Conversion Options
If you check Advanced mode, you'll have additional choices to make. The first of these is Engine, which refers to the color conversion engine that Photoshop uses to match colors. Even if you're using a Mac, ignore the Apple ColorSync option and choose Adobe (ACE). It's designed specifically to work with Photoshop and other Adobe graphics applications. For Intent, unless you need to match another version of the image exactly, I suggest you use Perceptual. It will give you the most pleasing colors, rather than the most mechanically accurate ones. It also allows you to print a wider range of colors than, for example, Absolute Colorimetric. Check both Black Point Compensation and Use Dither, unless your print shop or service bureau tells you not to. Again, you'll see better-looking color.However, you can usually ignore the Advanced Controls area. You don't want to desaturate your monitor or change the color-blending gamma except under rare circumstances, which is something only an expert user is likely to encounter.