http://www.flickr.com/photos/41790885@N ... otostream/
For comparison this image printed close to what is seen on the monitor. Same Epson R2880 printer, paper, and Epson profile.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/41790885@N ... otostream/
The result implies there is no big problem with monitor and printer calibration. There was no duplication of profile in the workflow. I printed many variations of the problem image:
Different profiles and paper specifications in the Epson 2880 print driver dialog
Extra saturation
Profile intent set at Relative Colorimetric or Saturation
A different paper
Expanded image to Full Range HSL, Composite | Filter at amount 15% onto original, saved for printing
Failure, until...
The last variation on the list happened after I noticed that the image has a nearly full HSV range but its HSL range is far below maximum at the highlight end (goes up to about the 71% point when you examine it in Levels and Color | HSL). By comparison, the image that prints without a problem has full range in both HSV and HSL. (Would I have noticed this difference if my processing software was not Picture Window Pro? Perhaps after more wasted paper, if ever.)
When I print, I save the image by itself or on a layout from PWP and open it in Fast Stone. The FS print dialog has a gamma adjustment. I eventually thought to reduce it from the default 1.00 to 0.80. Success! I could probably go to 0.85 gamma for somewhat better shadows, but at the moment resources and dedication are a bit low.
Questions:
- Is HSV-HSL disparity a sign of bad exposure and/or processing, or does it just happen sometimes, especially with flowers?
- Does color theory explain a relation between HSV-HSL disparity and print gamma? Or is this pair just an accidental contrast?
- When preparing a version of an image for the printer, is there a more or less standard procedure that will take care of this problem? Otherwise, it is print, try gamma adjustment, print, ...