Let PSCS5 Manage Color or Deskjet Printer?

I can't seem to get predictable color when printing from PS.
What do I need to do to set everything correctly?
Details:
Monitor: Dell 2410
Calibration: Dell factory Adobe RGB
Color profile: Adobe RGB
If Photoshop manages color shadows are too dark with a severe green cast.
If the printer manages the color shadows are too dark and much more saturated than the image.
Do I need to find a profile for the printer? for the monitor?
thanks
gZ

I kind of equated "better" with "more accurate" to the image.  Indeed, I get a very good match from the printer to my document colors.  This particular printer has always delivered a good match for me, from XP to Vista now to Windows 7.  The paper stacking mechanism broke a long time ago, but as long as I print one page at a time it still works.
You say you're not getting a good match to the color in your images...  Perhaps we can discuss this further...
What printer is it, specifically, and what cartridges does it use?  (My 932c uses 45 and 78 HP cartridges).
What document profile describes the image you're printing from (I'm printing primarily from sRGB)?
What paper are you printing on (I'm actually using HP Premium Plus glossy paper)?
Is your monitor calibrated (can't recall whether you said it was in the other thread)?
Is there an overall color cast to the print?
Are there any particular colors you're seeing diverge a lot (e.g., blues)?
Perhaps not every HP printer will deliver equivalent performance.  I knew I had found a gem way back.
Just for fun I'm going to try printing several images from documents of different profiles, just to ensure I'm not just lucky that I'm getting a good match with sRGB documents alone.
-Noel

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  • Print and Softproof colors are bad for "Application managed color"

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    1. Specifying an ICC Profile within an Application
    2. Open the image you want to print in an application. Edit/retouch the image as needed.
    3. Check that the correct ICC profile has been assigned, select the item that allows the application to manage colors, then specify the profile for printing. For example, from the Print or Print with Preview screen of Adobe Photoshop, select 'Photoshop Manages Colors', then select a profile as the printer profile. At this time, please clear the 'Black Point Compensation' checkbox.
    The ICC profiles installed for Canon photo paper appear as follows.
    Note: The profile names for other manufacturers' papers will appear differently.
    (For example: Canon Pro9000 PR1)
    (1) Printer model name
    (2) Media type
    Each letter pair represents its respective Media type.
    PR = Canon Photo Paper Pro and Pro II
    SP: = Canon Photo Paper Plus Glossy
    MP: = Canon Matte Photo Paper
    SG: = Canon Photo Paper Plus Semi-gloss
    GL: = Canon Photo Paper Plus Glossy II
    PT: = Canon Photo Paper Pro Platinum
    Note: If your printer does not support one of the above paper types, the corresponding profile will not be installed. Please see the on-screen manual of your printer for supported paper types.
    (3) Print quality
    The numbers correspond to the numbers on the print quality slide bar in the [Quality & Media] dialog box opened from the Print screen of the driver. The lower the number, the finer the quality.
    4. Select the command to print from your application to bring up the Print screen.
    In Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6, select Color Matching from the drop-down menu, and then select 'ColorSync'.
    Note: If you are using Adobe Photoshop CS2 or newer and have selected 'Let Photoshop Determine Colors', the 'Color Matching' from the Print Options pop-up menu is automatically set to 'ColorSync.'
    Using earlier versions of Mac OS X, from the Print dialogue, select Color Options from the drop-down menu, set 'Color Correction': 'None'.
    5. Select Quality & Media from the drop-down menu. Set the Media Type and print quality settings to the same parameters as those in the custom profile.
    6. Click 'Print' to print your image.
    Message was edited by: Ir. Bob

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