Iphoto kodak prints too dark

I previously had no trouble uploading photos directly from iphoto to kodak, I had not done it in a long time. I uploaded some photos last week and they came back very dark. I use a nikon d70 shooting in camera raw. I did minimal adjustments (iphoto auto exposure mostly) and everything looked fine on the computer screen.
whats the trick?
thanks,
tim

tim:
Check one of the photos by opening it with Preview, type Command+i, and see what color profile the jpg version of it has. You may have to export the jpg version to the desktop to open it with Preview. It the file has the Adobe RGB profile that is probably why they came out darker than expected. You may have to embed the sRGB color profile in it with either Preview, ColorSync Utility or the Applescript that's available for download at  Toad's Cellar.
TIP: For insurance against the iPhoto database corruption that many users have experienced I recommend making a backup copy of the Library6.iPhoto (iPhoto.Library for iPhoto 5 and earlier) database file and keep it current. If problems crop up where iPhoto suddenly can't see any photos or thinks there are no photos in the library, replacing the working Library6.iPhoto file with the backup will often get the library back. By keeping it current I mean backup after each import and/or any serious editing or work on books, slideshows, calendars, cards, etc. That insures that if a problem pops up and you do need to replace the database file, you'll retain all those efforts. It doesn't take long to make the backup and it's good insurance.
I've created an Automator workflow application (requires Tiger or later), iPhoto dB File Backup, that will copy the selected Library6.iPhoto file from your iPhoto Library folder to the Pictures folder, replacing any previous version of it. It's compatible with iPhoto 6 and 7 libraries and Tiger and Leopard. iPhoto does not have to be closed to run the application, just idle. You can download it at Toad's Cellar. Be sure to read the Read Me pdf file.
Note: There now an Automator backup application for iPhoto 5 that will work with Tiger or Leopard.

Similar Messages

  • Some images printing too dark

    I have two cameras that I use with iPhoto 6.0.4. A Canon G4, and a Pentax ist D. In iPhoto both cameras have nice looking images. The images from the Canon make beautiful prints, but the Pentax images print too dark. How can I fix this? Can I set different printing preferences for each camera?

    whenever I calibrate my iMac with the Spyder2 hardware, I have to calibrate it twice because I always forget to turn off the Screen Saver and the Energy Saver 'Put Screen to Sleep' option.
    another important thing about calibration. where is your 'book located during the calibration? what lights or on or off? is there any direct sunlight shining on the 'book?
    personally, I prefer to calibrate at night with all lights turned off. if I calibrate at day, I shut the tinted doors and turn all (fluorescent) lights off. I realise that you are supposed to calibrate under your normal lighting conditions but I prefer this method

  • Images appear fine in Photoshop cs6 and cc, but print too dark, and also show too dark in Windows picture viewer. How can I correct this? Is this a Photoshop setting issue or what?

    Images appear fine in Photoshop cs6 and cc, but print too dark, and also show too dark in Windows picture viewer. How can I correct this? Is this a Photoshop setting issue or what?

    Ok, look at your files in Photoshop. What is the profile assigned to them? You can find this out by going to the Status bar at the bottom, clicking on the right-pointing triangle and choosing document Profile from the list.
    Then in Windows, go to your Control Panel > Color Management and add sRGB (if it isn't there) and select it as your default profile.
    I hope that will work.

  • Epson prints too dark from LR on color managed MacBook Pro?

    Hi all,
    I have a newish MacBook Pro, calibrated with Spyder2, and printing to an Epson 2200. The prints are too dark, and don't really come close to matching the screen in LR. I've brought the images into PS2 for soft proofing, but the prints are still far too dark. It's not just out of LR, but DPP as well. I found this topic:
    http://www.adobeforums.com/cgi-bin/webx/.3bc44027/28
    Tthat seems to describe my problem, but it seems to be Adobe-specific. Doug doesn't say if he's tried printing from other apps. I use Epson's custom profiles, which actually seem to be worse than the standard profiles that come with the driver.
    A new twist seems to be that profiled jpg images with sRGB profiles exported from LR also print too dark when I had them sent out for printing, which leads me to think that my screen is not profiled correctly, or there's some weird flaw in the Mac's color management engine that skews everything.
    My first question: When I profile my screen using Spyder2, I have the brightness set at maximum. Should I bring it down, and if so, how far? The Spyder2 help says use "Factory Defaults", but the MBP ships with brightness set on auto-adjust based on ambient light levels.
    My second question: Are there others who have this issue? Have any of you resolved them successfully, and if so, how?
    Thanks!
    Timmy

    Time for a reality/sanity check for those who complain that "the "prints are too dark from my Epson printer"!
    If you will just reduce your monitor's white-point luminance to the range of 80-90 cd/m2 when you edit your images, it's almost certain that the problem will be solved (assuming you're not making some other error in color management setup). Many people conclude that their problem must be a generic failure or defect of Epson printers (i.e., compared to HP, etc)-- or that the Epson paper profiles are defective. Well, perhaps there's some element of truth to that conclusion--to the extent that Epson printers have evidently been designed with typical professional editing environments in mind (i.e., the low brightness levels to which "serious" printers adjust their monitors and ambient lighting). Why would they do that: Well, who wants to spend many hours each day looking at the glare of a 200 cd/m2 monitor screen (and the reflections from a brighly lighted room)?
    So, for getting "monitor-matching" prints from printers such as the SP 2200, you simply need to work (edit) with your images in a more-or-less "dimly lit" room using a monitor that is properly adjusted for such a low-light environment--(i.e., the screen luminance not higher than 90-100 cd/m2). Of course even with such a reduced screen luminance, the light used for print-viewing must be sufficiently bright(**)
    It's possible that your monitor cannot be adjusted to the necessary (low) luminance level--or that you haven't any means to measure the luminance level. Those are correctable hardware issues, although may require $$.
    (**)please note that a fairly bright viewing light is needed for prints (made as suggested above) to appear to be a reasonably close "match" to the monitor image.
    Phil

  • Recently my PDF files have printed too dark.  Has something changed in the software?

    Why do my PDF files print too dark? 

    2many2cho0se wrote:
    Yes...I know iMessage is supposed to be where there is wifi...
    Actually, all iMessage requires is a data connection, & that data connection can be either WiFi or 3G.

  • Exported Jpeg's when sent to photo lab print too dark

    I have had consistent results with exported jpeg images that look fine on my monitor (as raw files)and show in the histogram in lightroom 2.5 as the highlights just starting to clip as printing too dark when sent to a photo lab in SRGB.  Is this a fault of my monitor?  I have calibrated the monitor, a Dell S2409W, using charts on the website at http://www.normankoren.com/makingfineprints1A.html but this still happens. Will darkening the Monitor help or will the images still clip at the same point?  I have been able to send a second image with the exposure and or brightness boosted a bit and they print brighter, but this is a pain.  What is the best way to correct this so that I can see the same image as I get back from the lab?

    hello henrykipson,
    you said that you want starting an professional laboratory business,i can talking about this because i had a laboratory until some years ago .i hope that you made some artistic study,so it's more easy for you to learn this topic.you must study,an pass an examination  for take an artigianal licence that allow you to open this activity ,the licence given you the opportunity to work either for sale photografic material either to shoot and developing,one time that you had pass this examination you must gone to the police autority and inform these of your business (is under police control.because you work with chemical material,and also because you had a reservate people information,and they must given you their assent.)after all you can start to buy a good developer and print machine beyond to have a dark room.for manual print.you must decided if do you want work in black and white or color.You can do both but is better to specialize by one of them ,like you want.
    Remember from the digital events many people print his image at home,you must deciding maybe is better to work with a professional photographer,that can given you more work.itsn't easy.you must have a good preparation because ,they are more exigent.The good results depend also from the quality of your works.a good machine,good chemical product,good upkeep,of your laboratory.(in italy this is the procedure,i think also in other country,because is a ticklish question licence.)I hope that this my little explanation are useful to you.Good luck .
    cheers    alessandra minotti

  • Illustrator PDFs print correctly from PC, but print too dark from Macs

    Photoshop and Illustrator PDF files (CS5 & 6) print correctly from my work PC, but not either of my Macs. See below:
    At work, I have a Dell PC and an iMac, at home I have a MacBook Pro.
    At work there is a big office color Ricoh printer for the Dell and iMac, at home I have a Epson 3-in-one laserjet for the MacBook Pro.
    Both the work and home Macs will print  Illustrator/Photoshop PDFs very dark/undersaturated/off color on their relative printers, but the work PC prints them correctly.
    At work, If you hold up a print of a PDF file printed from the Dell PC, and one printed from the iMac, they are completely different looking - the Dell print matches the Dell and iMac screens, but the iMac print is very dark and dull.
    At work, when I open a Illustrator or Photoshop PDF on the work PC and send it to the Richo printer, it comes out perfectly matching the screen, but, if I open it on the iMac and send it to the Richo printer, it prints too dark/off color.
    These are the *exact* same PDF files I am opening on both the PC and the iMac - our files are saved on a server so I'm accessing the same documents on both machines.
    Also, I create the files on the iMac and save them to the server on the iMac, but if I open them on the iMac it prints too dark, and if I open them on the PC, it prints correctly.
    At home on the MacBook Pro, the prints are also much darker than the screen (despite color calibration with a ColorMunki as well as following all Epson's color calibration steps) and I see a similar color problem as printing to the work printer from the work iMac.
    Someone please tell me this is just a printer profile thing and I can go in somewhere on my Macs and switch something so they print the same as the PC does!
    Thank you in advance for explaining why my Macs are making me pull out my hair!

    the iMac it prints too dark
    your print space is off on the Mac
    or you are applying the wrong source profile or both
    on the MacBook Pro, the prints are also much darker than the screen (despite color calibration
    EDIT: sorry i misread that as your monitor was also dark, if the mac displays the problem doc proper, you are targeting a bad print space, that's where i would look... 
    you app is apply the wrong source profile (or your monitor profile is off)
    basing the source>print space conversion on the wrong source profile could account for your printing woes
    be sure you are embedding an ICC profile in your doc, are opening it in a color-managed app, and it should display properly
    be sure your workflow uses the embedded profile and your printer is setup to convert to the proper printer profile
    color management theory
    epson workflow

  • Why does PS CC print too dark? I found printing from PS CS5 was more accurate.

    Why does PS CC print too dark? I did not have this issue when printing with PS CS5.

    Why does PS CC print too dark? I did not have this issue when printing with PS CS5.

  • Acrobat XI is prints too dark!

    Acrobat XI is printing too dark to our machines.  Acrobat 7 prints just fine, same file, same machine.
    Anyone else having this issue?  It's VERY frustrating and short of adjusting EVERY photo in EVERY
    file we cannot figure out what the issue is.  We are using Windows XP & Windows 7, same result in both.

    Have you compared the colour management settings in Acrobat's print dialogs (Advanced)?

  • C309g-m printer, prints too dark

    My printer always prints too dark.
    The prints never come out  like they look on the screen. I can manually change the lightness of the photo to compensate, but it would be nice if there were settings I could change in the printer instead.
    Any advice would be nice..thanks!

    What paper quality and paper type settings are you using?  If you are printing on plain paper but have selected a photo paper then the result will be oversaturated.  Also if your application gives the choice of RGB or CMYK then choose RGB.  (The printer uses CMYK inks, but the driver is expecting RGB data.)
    What operating system?  Your driver may have settings for Advanced Color Control.  In the Windows 7 dr.iver this would be found in Printing Preferences, Color, More Printing Options.  You can change the brightness and saturation as shown in the sliders here:
    Bob Headrick,  HP Expert
    I am not an employee of HP, I am a volunteer posting here on my own time.
    If your problem is solved please click the "Accept as Solution" button ------------V
    If my answer was helpful please click the "Thumbs Up" to say "Thank You"--V

  • Printing from iPhoto 6: shadow areas printing too dark

    I have printed directly from iPhoto to my Epson 1290 (1280 in US) and the colour accuracy of the prints compared to the screen is good, except that the prints tend to be very dark in the shadow areas, sometimes just solid black ink and complete loss of shadow detail.
    If I print from Photoshop, the colours are less vivid and the prints appear lighter than on the screen, but I have better detail in the shadow areas. I don't want to get into the whole thing about colour management in Photoshop, this is just to let you know that the detail is present in the images and is not an overexposure problem.
    What I want to know is whether it is possible to somehow change any settings to prevent this loss of shadow detail when I print from iPhoto. The default Add ColorSync Profile is checked in the iPhoto preferences. Some dark/shadow areas come out looking like a blob of black ink, sort of posterized, which spoils an otherwise good print.
    Many thanks to any of you clever folk out who can help.

    Thanks Morris, will try that.
    I found that if I tweak the output in the Levels palette in Photoshop, setting the slider to about 12, it reduces the excessive black ink in the shadow areas.
    Otherwise, the colours are a very good match when I print from iPhoto.

  • My photo book printed too dark

    Hi.  I ordered a book via iphoto and the pictures were WAY too dark.  Is there a contact person somewhere in iworld that I can call about adjusting the heavy ink?

    Apple guarantees satisfaction - see - http://www.apple.com/support/photoservices/returns/
    What color profile are the photos - sRGB is the best - many people have reported that using adobe RGB causes very dark prints
    In general less editing is best - and using iPhoto is better than PhotoShop or other editing programs  --  http://www.apple.com/support/photoservices/preparation_tips/
    LN

  • Prints too dark from Native IPad Apps

    Printer : HP- Deskjet- Ink Advantage -3545
    Printer Condition: Brand new : 2 days old with original cartridges
    Paper : Kodak Photo paper
    Device with problem : iPad 2 with iOS 7
    Printing option used : AirPrint and HP-ePrint. Both options reproduced the same problems
    Power Supply: Raw power
    Connectivity: wireless only
    Problem: Prints color photos too dark when printed from any iPad app other than Google Chrome
    Investigations done by printing the very same picture from different devices
    1. Printing from Computer/laptop/Pc - Color reproductions were fine
    2. Printing from iPad2 - Google Chrome - Color reproductions were fine
    3. Printing from iPad2- photos app - Too dark + edges get cutoff
    4. Copy function from Printer - Color reproductions were fine
    5. Printing from iPad2 - Photoshop Express App - Too dark + edges get cutoff
    -No Paper Jams, ink bleeding/smearing , toner level issues were observed
    Please provide suggestions on how this problem can be resolved.

    Hello Life_Refactored,
    Welcome to the HP Support Forums. I understand that when printing from two different apps on your iPad that the color is not printing correctly.
    We know the printer is working fine as you are able to successfully print the same photo from your computer and from Google Chrome on your iPad and the colors are correct. You didn’t mention where in your testing that you used the HP ePrint app. I would recommend contacting the app developers (Apple for the Photo app, and Adobe for the Photoshop Express App) about why the information being sent to the printer is not sending the correct color information and cutting off the borders.
    I have included the iPad Contact Support page and the Photoshop Family Community page.
    Regards,
    Happytohelp01
    Please click on the Thumbs Up on the right to say “Thanks” for helping!
    Please click “Accept as Solution ” on the post that solves your issue to help others find the solution.
    I work on behalf of HP

  • Printing too dark in CS4

    I have CS4 on Tiger 10.4.11 on a completely color managed system, Epson 4800 printer. Printing seems to be broken in the new version. Prints are very dark. I know to select "Photoshop Manages Color" in Color Handling, and "No Color Management" in the printer color management dropdown. The procedure works fine in CS3.
    That something is up is suggested by this wrinkle. In this case I am printing using advanced b/w. If under color handling I choose "Printer Manages Color" and go into the b/w advanced setup, it's still too dark. If instead I choose "No color management", then make my choices in advanced b/w, it works fine.
    One would first think that it's a double color management problem, but I'm turning it off anywhere I can see it in CS4, and still having problems. Is there a new secret handshake I haven't puzzled out yet?

    > So, Eric, you are saying we need to Convert to a space (or gamma) in
    > Photoshop before Command+P -- because the Epson Adv B&W driver will
    > assume a color space/gamma -- what would that assumption be based on
    > (gamma of our Mac default MonitorRGB)? Assuming I am not talking
    > about feeding the Epson grayscale.
    Yes.
    The ABW driver wants to be fed gamma 2.2-encoded image data.
    This is why my standard recommendation for printing to the ABW driver __ONLY__ is to use:
    Color Handling = Photoshop Manages Colors
    Printer Profile = Adobe RGB
    Rendering Intent = Relative Colorimetric
    Black Point Compensation = Enabled
    Why does this work? Because no matter what your image working space is (e.g., sRGB, Adobe RGB, ProPhoto RGB, Apple RGB, ColorMatch RGB, etc.), doing this will cause your image data to be encoded in gamma 2.2 before the data gets passed off to the driver. (Adobe RGB has a gamma encoding of 2.2.)
    The same workflow will work in Lightroom, too. You just need to check the "Display Profiles" checkbox in Lightroom to access Adobe RGB when selecting a printer profile.
    If you are in grayscale mode instead of RGB mode, choose "Gray Gamma 2.2" instead of "Adobe RGB" for the printer profile.
    However, the catch is that -- as noted in this thread -- there is currently a glitch, which we (Adobe + Apple + Epson) are investigating. One of the symptoms of that glitch is that the above suggested workflow does not work on Leopard.
    > Does this CS4-Apple-Epson issue have anything to do with some users
    > reporting dark prints in Photoshop Manage Color - No Color
    > Adjustment Epson workflow? -- For example, someone using 1.8 gamma
    > Monitor RGB...
    Unlikely.

  • Prints too dark with Photoshop Elements 10

    My photos are printing out much darker than what is on the monitor display.  I have calibrated the monitor and changed the color profile, color management & color space numerous times and they I cannot see any difference in the prints. I've changed the printer settings, still too dark.  I have edited the photos and brightened them, still much darker than on the display.  I'm using Photoshop Elements 10 with a new monitor and computer.  My old computer and Adobe Photoshop CS2 program did not have this problem.  Any suggestions?

    Check to be sure that color is not managed both by PSE and by the printer. In editor, go to Edit>color settings and check "always manage color for computer screens." Then, go to File>print>more options (lower left in the dialog)>Color Management tab>Color handling: "Printer Manages Color."
    Are drivers and firmware for your printer up to date?
    Do pictures print well via other applications with your equipment?
    Have you printed a file,  processed in Elements, at a kiosk, such as at CVS? How does that look?
    I assume that you are printing from Editor, not from Organizer. It is said that the print engines are not the same.

Maybe you are looking for