![]() ![]() You can generate a corrected dolor profile for your printer and paper using the software tools that come with your color calibration tool. If you have an image and there exists an are that is (for example) a pure red (255,0,0) LR is going to send that red value to both the printer and the monitor If the monitor transmits (240, 010, 009) instead of (255,0,0) then the color will be off if the printer using a correct icc color profiles prints (255,0,0) Likewise if the wrong color profile is used for the printer then then the print image will render perhaps (214, 110, 090). I'm not sure that it has clicked with you yet how critical is is too have a calibrated monitor and an appropriate ICC color profile on your printer and paper. You can use Soft-Proofing in LR to mimic what you will get with your printer on your chosen paper. Making what you see on the paper look like what you see on the screen is limited by the shortcomings of each media. Light is reflected from the paper and transmitted by the monitor. The Most important thing that you can do is to learn how the monitor differs from the paper print. There is no magic button for either and IMO nothing replaces learning all of the parameters that make a print. The functionality of the Canon print studio pro is really no different from the LR Print module. The Pixma Pro 1 and Pixma Pro 10 can be used with the Canon print studio pro but not the Pixma Pro 100.
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