I also checked the Save "As a Copy" box and unchecked the "ICC Profile: sRGB IE61966-2.1" box. To be able to print to the Brother printer, I did some further study myself to find that I needed to save a jpg photo as Photoshop EPS and check the "Use Proof Setup: Working CMYK" box.
So I get a saved profile with the document. I clicked the Photoshop frame arrow to find the dialog box display with the selected Document Profile.įrom what you recommended next I " Make sure that the profile is saved with the document (Embed)". I opened an image of my own near the center of photoshop window. and not on the bottom of the Photoshop frame.
I was looking at the bottom left corner of the image itself as the document. Give it a try though, you've got nothing to lose.Īpologies, I misunderstood what you meant by PS document. My experience with this type of device has not shown that it can produce very consistent results. Then it may be possible to have a profile for this device that can help improve the color on that device. I'd still suggest profiling the process after it is been printing 25 sheets. Given that acceptable may be very different in your current situation. The results are "acceptable." and the work can be sold as commercial quality. After that the profile it uses works properly. That laser printer is quite stable and has its own internal calibration to baseline the press. Where I work they have a new digital press, which is basically a very large 150k Laser printer. Color copiers can be profiled, they are very expensive, but the color is not stable and the profile is soon worthless.
Even the much more expensive laser copiers are inexpensive compared to something that can actually maintain working temperatures consistently. By comparison, a 500 dollar Laser printer is inexpensive.