Hi,
I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation window telling me to select the right profiles. Any help? Thanks! Gerhard -- My blog: http://www.funsite.eu/ _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
Am Dienstag, 1. März 2016, 18:46:07 CET schrieb Gerhard Hoogterp:
> Hi, > > I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to > be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but > the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. > > There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) > which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. > > Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything > besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation > window telling me to select the right profiles. > > Any help? > Thanks! > Gerhard Hallo Gerhard, if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading the matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means matching the combination of paper and printer. Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager should all do to the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for selection. Regards Jürgen -- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gerhard Hoogterp
Am Dienstag, 1. März 2016, 18:46:07 CET schrieb Gerhard Hoogterp:
> Hi, > > I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to > be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but > the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. > > There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) > which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. > > Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything > besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation > window telling me to select the right profiles. > > Any help? > Thanks! > Gerhard Hallo Gerhard, if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading the matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means matching the combination of paper and printer. Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager should all do to the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for selection. Regards Jürgen -- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gerhard Hoogterp
Am Dienstag, 1. März 2016, 18:46:07 CET schrieb Gerhard Hoogterp:
> Hi, > > I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to > be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but > the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. > > There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) > which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. > > Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything > besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation > window telling me to select the right profiles. > > Any help? > Thanks! > Gerhard Hallo Gerhard, if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading the matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means matching the combination of paper and printer. Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager should all do to the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for selection. Regards Jürgen -- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gerhard Hoogterp
Am Dienstag, 1. März 2016, 18:46:07 CET schrieb Gerhard Hoogterp:
> Hi, > > I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to > be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but > the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. > > There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) > which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. > > Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything > besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation > window telling me to select the right profiles. > > Any help? > Thanks! > Gerhard Hallo Gerhard, if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading the matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means matching the combination of paper and printer. Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager should all do to the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for selection. Regards Jürgen -- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Gerhard Hoogterp
Am Dienstag, 1. März 2016, 18:46:07 CET schrieb Gerhard Hoogterp:
> Hi, > > I try to get soft-proofing working on my digikam (version 4.12) and seem to > be stuck. For soft-proofing digikam wants an output device profile, but > the selectionbox for this profile is grayed out. > > There are profiles available (and installed for the monitor and workspace) > which area selectable without problems. But not so for the output. > > Documentation available seems to be outdated and didn't show anything > besides an outdated image from a previous color management installation > window telling me to select the right profiles. > > Any help? > Thanks! > Gerhard Hallo Gerhard, if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading the matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means matching the combination of paper and printer. Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager should all do to the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for selection. Regards Jürgen -- _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Jürgen Karbach
Hi,
> if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already > choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading > the > matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means > matching the combination of paper and printer. > Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. yeah, I was that far.. my system has all kinds of ICC files. The problem is that the choice for an output profile is grayed out and not available. So OR the profiles are not where digikam is expecting them for output devices (But they are in the folders where digikam says its searching) OR I'm missing something else.. Again, choosing my display profile is no problem, neither is the camera profile. It's just the output device who doesn't want to play ball.. Gerhard -- My blog: http://www.funsite.eu/ _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On 03/01/2016 04:22 PM, Gerhard Hoogterp wrote:
> Again, choosing my display profile is no problem, neither is the camera > profile. It's just the output device who doesn't want to play ball.. Is your output device profile an RGB profile or a CMYK profile? These days not all printers use CMYK profiles. The last I checked (a long time ago), digiKam only allowed to select CMYK profiles as output profiles. Elle -- http://ninedegreesbelow.com Color management and free/libre photography _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On Tuesday, March 01, 2016 04:34:06 PM Elle Stone wrote:
> On 03/01/2016 04:22 PM, Gerhard Hoogterp wrote: > > Again, choosing my display profile is no problem, neither is the camera > > profile. It's just the output device who doesn't want to play ball.. > > Is your output device profile an RGB profile or a CMYK profile? These > days not all printers use CMYK profiles. The last I checked (a long time > ago), digiKam only allowed to select CMYK profiles as output profiles. Hi, My printer is a cheapish epson stylus printer. But it's not as much for printing as for soft-proofing photo's before I send them off. But then again, digikam looking for CMYK profiles could be the problem. Until now I had mostly display ICC's not thinking digikam would be smart enough to actually know the difference (and besides, my output could be a special display.. ) so I expected the general bunch of ICC files to show up. But if that's already an issue, then I will have to find printer files first.. Thanks! Gerhard -- My blog: http://www.funsite.eu/ _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
On 03/01/2016 04:39 PM, Gerhard Hoogterp wrote:
> On Tuesday, March 01, 2016 04:34:06 PM Elle Stone wrote: >> On 03/01/2016 04:22 PM, Gerhard Hoogterp wrote: >>> Again, choosing my display profile is no problem, neither is the camera >>> profile. It's just the output device who doesn't want to play ball.. >> >> Is your output device profile an RGB profile or a CMYK profile? These >> days not all printers use CMYK profiles. The last I checked (a long time >> ago), digiKam only allowed to select CMYK profiles as output profiles. > > Hi, > > My printer is a cheapish epson stylus printer. But it's not as much for > printing as for soft-proofing photo's before I send them off. > > But then again, digikam looking for CMYK profiles could be the problem. Until > now I had mostly display ICC's not thinking digikam would be smart enough to > actually know the difference (and besides, my output could be a special > display.. ) so I expected the general bunch of ICC files to show up. > But if that's already an issue, then I will have to find printer files first.. https://www.drycreekphoto.com/icc/ provides printer profiles for a variety of commercial printers (Costco and such) who make photographic prints. Many establishments that make photographic prints have download links for their printer-paper combinations right on their websites. And you can find various printer profiles for various high and mid-range photographic "printer paper combinations" for download from the internet (for example do a search for Museo Portfolio paper and an Epson printer). Most/all of these profiles are RGB profiles. Does anyone on this list use digiKam for soft proofing? The last I checked, digiKam didn't seem to work very well for this purpose. Cinepaint (which probably nobody can compile any more) had great soft proofing capabilities. GIMP 2.8's capabilities are not too bad. GIMP 2.9 soft proofing is a little bit better than 2.8, as it finally provides black point compensation. Elle _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
In reply to this post by Jürgen Karbach
> if I'm right you have already a color printer. In fact you have also already
> choosen your sort(s) of printing sheets, all you have to do is downloading > the > matching icc-profile provided by the paper manufacturer. Matching means > matching the combination of paper and printer. > Feeding aunt google with "photo paper icc" will be a good start. > > For playing around to understand the workflow, you can use every > printer-icc- package provided by your Linux distribution. The paketmanager > should all do to > the right place. DigiKam will find it and should present the profiles for > selection. Thanks.. By now I was able to select a printer profile and I found a profile for the paper the printing company uses. But in the end I don't really see any real difference in the soft-proof. A tad darker, but that's it while the prints were a lot darker and lacking sparkle. The reason I started with this whole thing anyhow.. I'm also somewhat disappointed in the whole colormanagement under KDE. I found messages from developers pushing colord and uyranos as solutions for kde. Fast forward till now, Uyranos isn't available for the latest kubuntu lacking a needed lib and while colord is intergrated, the whole userinterface under kubuntu is basically a colord-kde-icc-manager commandline tool. I do remember an plugin for the kde systemsettings and I see references and screendumps online, but nothing to install or download. For softproof one has to depend on the applications like gimp and digikam. For the printer itself I didn't find anything yet. CUPS doesn't seem to have any settings but then again I would have to find ICC's for my Epson.. I did find a dmg file which was supposed to have these profiles, but after extracting it there were only empty folders.. not an ICC in sight.. All in all not exactly a lot of advancement since 2012 and definitely a lot more complicated than it should be. But I keep on trying.. starting with creating a new profile for my screen using my colorhug. As it has been some time I'm sure my current profile isn't correct anymore so that should be a good start. Thanks for everybody helping out! Gerhard - My blog: http://www.funsite.eu/ _______________________________________________ Digikam-users mailing list [hidden email] https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/digikam-users |
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