![]() Photoshop converts from the original document profile and into this print profile, and sends corrected numbers to the printer. ![]() Then you need to pick the correct profile for your particular combination of printer/paper/ink. The other option is to let Photoshop handle it. In that case PS just passes on the numbers as they happen to be, and the printer handles the rest. You can either let the printer driver handle color management (which is what most other apps do). You have two options for printing from Photoshop. Found this article describing the difference between SRGB (the standard for displaying color on the web) and Adobe RGB Apparently SRGB only uses like 35% of the colors, where Adobe uses 55% which led me to look up finding the Adobe RGB profile and luckily it was already an existing preset in my printer. Set the printer properties to Adobe RGB and print from it and the brightness matched much better (red was a little off, but that was also adjustable in my printers driver's properties. ![]() ![]() I looked up how to change the "color modes" with "custom color correction" on my printer and found a preset for Adobe RGB (which bumped up the gamma 2.2). After doing some digging, I found out that Adobe has it's own RGB color profile. ![]() I saw a ton of articles on monitor brightness calibration and I knew that just wasn't the case when other software was printing the colors correctly. I was looking high and low for this answer and stumbled upon the solution in my printers color profile. ![]()
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