Huey Pro Monitor Profile and Lightroom

I have saved a monitor profile on my computer, but don't understand how Lightroom uses that profile. I am currently using Epson and Ilford Paper on my Epson Stylus Pro 1400 and I have the correct color profiles for those papers.
My question is, if Lightroom does not manage the printing, what settings should be entered in the Epson Printer Setup to ensure that the printer is using my monitor profile in addition to the correct paper profile?

Wil-
First, what Jao said :)
Second: In regards to printing, a calibrated monitor profile gives us the best shot at a print looking like what we see on the screen, as long as when we print we have LR manage the color using the correct printer/paper profile and we turn off color management in the printer's driver.
If you have the printer manage color make sure that you tell LR to not manage color. In this case, the answer to your Printer Setup question is you have to choose whatever paper option most closely matches the paper you are using. Then, you have to go through a series of test prints and adjust your print driver color settings until they match what you see on the screen. You may have to alter those settings for different prints, to adjust for different image color balances.
It's really preferred to let LR do the color management, since you have both a monitor profile and a printer/paper profile.
Tony

Similar Messages

  • One again about color profiles and lightroom

    I have wide gamut monitor (nec pa271w) and I tried to calibrate it. After calibration it created new color profile and make it default in windows color managment. But now all pictures in Lightroom are not so colourful as they were before. If I choose srgb(default profile for windows) the colors become as they were before calibration but in this case I see srgb color space and not full color that my monitor can produce. I read articles about calibration but didn't find how to solve the problem with lightroom.

    You wrote
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}
    function(){return A.apply(null,[this].concat($A(arguments)))}But now all pictures in Lightroom are not so colourful as they were before.
    This is probably the effect of your now calibrated monitor vs. the uncalibrated one.
    Often uncalibrated monitors show highly over-saturated colors. It looks very rich and flashy and people are wowed.
    But these over-saturated colors cannot be printed and do not reflect the true state of the image data.
    When your monitor is calibrated properly it will display the colors as they should be.
    When you chose sRGB all the colors - particularly the reds and greens - will appear more saturated. That is the effect of this color space that is much smaller than Adobe RGB or Pro Photo RGB.
    LR will automatically find and select your calibrated color profile if it is saved in the right place / folder.
    And you can't change that. There is no provision for a different color space in LR.
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    WW

  • Macbook Pro Color Profile and Calibration for Photo processing.

    Hello Friends,
    May be it has already discussed in many forums but somehow I got confused about different solutions of the questions and due to this asking once again here.
    I am using Macbook pro of 2012 and there exist many color profiles in the Display settings.
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  • Super-Pink ... monitor calibration and Lightroom?

    I've been working on a set of files in Lightroom 2 on a PowerBook G4. I transferred them recently to a Power Mac G5.
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  • Macbook pro monitor flickers and audio interference

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  • Custom monitor profiles and the mini....

    I'm thinking of getting the new mac mini, and I see the video card supports two monitors. Does it also support two custom color profiles for people using monitor calibration hardware/software? My old macbook supports an external display, but I can only store one color profile for the laptop lcd. I'd like both external monitors on the mini to be color profiled if possible. I'm an amateur photographer, so this is a wanted feature if I upgrade my computer. Thanks for any information.

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  • I have a new Macbook Pro with Yosemite and Lightroom 5.6. Lightroom can't find my photos in my docs or on my desktop. Any ideas?

    Thanks for any guidance. I'm new to LR and Macs. I just can't get why my photos, which are in my docs and my desktop, seem to be invisible to LR.

    Where you using iPhoto to import your photos before? if so they are held inside an iPhoto Library.
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  • Display profiles and soft proofing Windows RGB / Monitor RGB

    This might have asked before, but I did not find any definite answer for this. Sorry this gets a bit long.
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    Long question(s):
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    I read from www.gballard.net that
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    I'm not sure how to read that. Assume here that my monitor has been calibrated to sRGB and the PS working space sRGB. Do in both cases photoshop strip away color profile from the image at first? What happens after that? Does in Windows RGB case Photoshop pass the color values as they are to display? What does it do in "Monitor RGB" case then? Does it assign my monitor profile to the image? If it does, does there also happen conversion from one color space to another? In either one conversion there must happen as the soft proofing results are different. Does either one cause "double profiling" to the image as the monitor is already calibrated?
    Thanks

    Windows defaults to sRGB if you don't calibrate your monitor so untagged sRGB files should display (more or less) correctly in applications that don't know about color management on systems with uncalibrated monitors.
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    When you proof against Monitor RGB, Photoshop will assign your monitor's icc profile to the image which tends to be utterly useless most of the time.

  • Monitor profile - does not stick

    Hello,
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    The interesting thing is that I can not change the profile in System preferences. If I click on any other profile I just get a "ping" sound and that's it.
    If I then restart the computer it uses automatically the profile I created with the tool.
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    I assume that this is correct.
    I have not had this issue with the first monitor profile done with the Pantone tool.
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    Sigi
    Message was edited by: Siegfried Braeuer
    null

    I have multiple profiles on my MacBook. I calibraded using the Pantone Huey Pro color meter and software, and the profile is stored in my user:Library:ColorSync:Profiles directory, not the system:library one. I've never used the Eye-One; did it give you the choice of location to save at calibration time?
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  • Monitor profile applied twice?

    Hi guys,
    the colors in Lightroom (and Photoshop Elements 7 Raw import window as well) look green and flat. I could fix this problem in the PSE7 editor window by switching off the monitor color profile. But I cannot find any similar handle in LR and PSE7 raw importer. So, it seems to me that the monitor profile is applied twice -- once from LR/PSE (which assumes no further color treatment, so does the correction itself), and second the graphics card (which expects uncalibrated color informations as input).
    Switching off calibration does not help either.
    System is
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    Windows Vista Home Premium
    Datacolor Spyder 3 Pro, SW Version 3.2.1
    I'm desperated... I mean, this is not such an unusual combination...
    Please advice.

    So, last night I've lost my patience with Windoze... All thesepop-ups and advanced and advanced-advanced andadvanced-advanced-advanced options in sub and sub-sub and sub-sub-sub dialogue boxes drive me nuts.... So, I'm back tothe good-old brute force methods:
    From the discussionabove it is clear that (a) all I need is the monitor profile and(b) that the problem is related to the system (and not specific to LRor PSE7). Thus I simply have deleted all icc/icm files in the profiles directory, except the one from Spyder -- and surprise, surprise, the colors seem to be correct now (if meanwhile my eyes have not adapted to the wrong colors.....) Will have to cross-check with a printout and perhaps a "calibrated" proof print, if I can find one... But a priori, the test image looks fine now and is consistent with other monitor profile aware viewers. The colors also seems to be consistent with what I get on the Linux side when monitor profile management is enabled (difficult to compare directly in dual boot mode...).
    After deleting the "useless files", I still saw a very slight green tint in test image. Then I played a bit with the rendering options perceptive/saturation/relative/absolute in the Windows system settings -- before I could reboot the machine (to make sure that there are no left-over settings floating around), just in this moment SP2 arrived. Switching back to the default settings (perceptive for photos) after installation of SP2, I cannot see the green tint anymore.
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  • Fully Color Managed Application (using calibrated monitor profiles)

    Hi,
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    I'm trying to write an application to open a JPEG with an embedded colour profile (in this case AdobeRGB) and display it with correct colour on my monitor, for which I have an accurate custom hardware calibrated profile. In my efforts to do this several problems / queries have arisen.
    So, JAVA aside, the concept is simple:
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    BufferedImage img = ImageIO.read(new File("my-adobe-rgb.jpg"));(b) Also seems OK (well at least no exceptions)...
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    (c) Here is the major problem...
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          for (int i=0; i<d.length && i<256; i++){
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    System.out.println();
    Any help much appreciated.
    Thanks.

    I have had some sucess with this, but it wasn't easy or obvious. The trick is converting the color to the monitor profile and then changing the color model to be sRGB without changing the pixel data. JAI's Format operation does this easily although I'm sure there are other ways to do it. The RGB data is then displayed without being converted to sRGB so that the monitor calibration is maintained. I will answer your questions since I had similar ones.
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    Q2. I believe paint is just very slow, not hanging. Any color model other than XYZ or sRGB requires conversion before it can be displayed (as sRGB). This is both slow and incorrect for a calibrated monitor.
    Q3. Yes that is what I have found, a conversion to sRGB will always happen, unless it appears to be already done as when the color model is sRGB (even though the pixel data is not!).
    Q4. It is possible but apparently only with this somewhat strange work around. If there is a way to change the Java display profile to be other than sRGB, I could not find it either. However, calibrated RGB display can be achieved.
    Since I have seen many other posts asking for an example of color management, here is some code. This JAI conversion works for many pairs of source and destination profiles including CMYK to RGB. It does require using ICC profiles in external files rather than embedded in the image.
    package calibratedrgb;
    import com.sun.media.jai.widget.DisplayJAI;
    import java.awt.*;
    import java.awt.color.*;
    import java.awt.image.*;
    import java.io.IOException;
    import javax.media.jai.*;
    import javax.swing.*;
    * @author keitht
    public class Main {
        public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
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            ICC_ColorSpace sourceCS = new ICC_ColorSpace(sourceProfile);
            ColorModel sourceCM = RasterFactory.createComponentColorModel(
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            ImageLayout sourceIL = new ImageLayout();
            sourceIL.setColorModel(sourceCM);
            // tag the image with the source profile using format
            RenderingHints sourceHints = new RenderingHints(JAI.KEY_IMAGE_LAYOUT, sourceIL);
            ParameterBlockJAI ipb = new ParameterBlockJAI("format");
            ipb.addSource(pi);
            ipb.setParameter("datatype", pi.getSampleModel().getDataType());
            pi = JAI.create("format", ipb, sourceHints);
            // create a destination color model from the monitor ICC profile
            ICC_Profile destinationProfile = ICC_Profile.getInstance("Monitor Profile.icm");
            ICC_ColorSpace destinationCS = new ICC_ColorSpace(destinationProfile);
            ColorModel destinationCM = RasterFactory.createComponentColorModel(
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            ImageLayout destinationIL = new ImageLayout();
            destinationIL.setColorModel(destinationCM);
            // convert from source to destination profile
            RenderingHints destinationHints = new RenderingHints(JAI.KEY_IMAGE_LAYOUT, destinationIL);
            ParameterBlockJAI cpb = new ParameterBlockJAI("colorconvert");
            cpb.addSource(pi);
            cpb.setParameter("colormodel", destinationCM);
            pi = JAI.create("colorconvert", cpb, destinationHints);
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            // first, create an sRGB color model
            ColorSpace sRGB = ColorSpace.getInstance(ColorSpace.CS_sRGB);
            ColorModel sRGBcm = RasterFactory.createComponentColorModel(
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            ImageLayout sRGBil = new ImageLayout();
            sRGBil.setColorModel(sRGBcm);
            // then avoid the incorrect conversion to sRGB on the way to the display
            // by using format to tag the image as sRGB without changing the data
            RenderingHints sRGBhints = new RenderingHints(JAI.KEY_IMAGE_LAYOUT, sRGBil);
            ParameterBlockJAI sRGBpb = new ParameterBlockJAI("format");
            sRGBpb.addSource(pi);
            sRGBpb.setParameter("datatype", pi.getSampleModel().getDataType());
            pi = JAI.create("format", sRGBpb, sRGBhints); // replace color model with sRGB
            // RGB numbers are unaffected and can now be sent without conversion to the display
            // disguised as sRGB data. The platform monitor calibration profile is bypassed
            // by the JRE because sRGB is the default graphics configuration color model profile
            JFrame frame = new JFrame();
            Container contentPane = frame.getContentPane();
            contentPane.setLayout(new BorderLayout());
            DisplayJAI d = new DisplayJAI(pi); // Graphics2D could be used here
            contentPane.add(new JScrollPane(d),BorderLayout.CENTER);
            frame.setDefaultCloseOperation(JFrame.EXIT_ON_CLOSE);
            frame.setSize(600,600);
            frame.setVisible(true);
    }

  • PSE7 Monitor Profile woes (Huey Pro)

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  • How to select my custom monitor calibration profile into Lightroom 5.7?  I used i1 Display Pro to calibrate my monitor, I could not find or confirm that Lightroom is using my custom monitor calibration profile? Thank you very much.

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