What Comes Next? The Fine Print! - WordPress.com · 2018-04-29 · The Fine Print! Evaluating the...

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What Comes Next? The Fine Print!

www.erikagentry.com

www.erikagentry.com

What Comes Next? The Fine Print!

www.erikagentry.com

Evaluating the IWP (Image Worth Printing)– Working backwards: Evaluating the image and choosing the

paper before starting image processing.– Characteristics of substrates and print samples

Basic Review Color Management and ICC profilesImage Workflow Overview/Review

– RAW processing software + the power of selective adjustments

Soft Proofing / Hard Proofing: Output to printers and Hahnemühle papers

Critiquing & printing your files

What We’ll Cover

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• Does the IWP lend itself best to color or black and white?

• Which paper best lends its characteristics to those of your image?

• See samples in store or better yet –try out a sample pack.

Step1: Evaluating the IWP

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• Paper Surface– Smooth– Textured– Glossy/Matte

• Base Color / Content– Bright white– Off white– Cotton, Bamboo, etc

• GSM (grams per square meter)

– Compare density paper– Will the print go behind

glass?– Will the paper show in

the presentation without glass?

Step 2: Choose Your Substrate

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• Paper Test – Print CTI target with

icc profiles – Print RGB/Grayscale

step wedge• Let paper dry over night• Evaluate under daylight

balanced light source• Find optimum black and

white point before processing the IWP to match

Step 3: Evaluate the Substrate

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Step 0: Stabilize Your Work Environment

© Al Gore’s Office

• No matter how good your monitor or how well you have it calibrated and profiled, make sure your working environment is subdued neutral lighting that does not vary throughout the day. – Desktop neutral gray– Avoid having areas of bright

color within your field of vision. (furnishings, clothes)

– Block all windows

© Al Gore’s Office

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Step 0: Stabilize Your Work Environment

Step 0: Stabilize Your Work Environment

Buy a monitor hood or google how to make one yourself out of Black foam core or plastic.

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Alternatively. Give Your Knitter Friends a Project

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Step 0: Stabilize Your Work Environment, Monitor Calibration

• Computer monitors must be calibrated and profiled before they can be part of a professional workflow.

• Accurate calibration requires a hardware device, such as the xrite passport bundle.

• After profiling your monitor, you view a comparison between the digital file, displayed in Photoshop (or other professional imaging software), and the proof print, as viewed under 5000K/D50 lighting, to indicate whether your monitor profile is accurate.

• If your work requires inkjet prints for display, you may do better to evaluate the images under 6500K/D65 (warmer) lighting .

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• RAW FILES: ProPhoto RGB

• JPGs: Adobe RGB 1998

• For the WEB: sRGB

• Choose “ask when opening”.

Photoshop: Edit-Color Settings

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Step 4: Software Set-Up and Profiles,

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Adobe RGB 1998

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sRGB (for the web)

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Printer Profiles

Daylight Balanced Light Source

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• If your monitor is calibrated, you can get a general idea of how your image will render when printer via “soft proofing”.

• But no one really uses this

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Step 4: Software Set-Up & ProfilesPhotoshop: Soft Proofing

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Step 4: Software Set-Up & ProfilesLightroom: Soft Proofing

Step 4: Profiles Inkjet

• Download paper a profile from the web that is specific to your chosen paper and printer.

• IE: Canon / Hahnemühle .

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www.erikagentry.comhttps://www.hahnemuehle.com/

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Step 5: Camera RAW Processors

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RAW + Photoshop

• Process the RAW file• Open in Photoshop

– Selective Adjustments– Creative Enhancements– Size– Sharpen

• Print

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• A powerful and precise control to manipulate and correct tone and color.– Tone and color

• Layer Adjustment• Combine with

layer masks for selective dodging and burning.

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Step 6:Selective Adjustments: Curves

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Step 6:Selective Adjustments: Curves

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Step 7: The Hard Proof

• Print a small version using proper icc output

• Let the print dry for 24hrs

• Live with it• Evaluate it• THEN commit to

a final size, creative interpretation, paper substrate

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• Learn to “see”– LOOK at a lot of printed

art in museums, galleries, etc.

• Evaluate prints under daylight balanced light.– Use a consistent viewing

standard

• Think like an Art Director– Get a Peer opinion

Step 7: The Hard Proof

Review: The Print Process

Live Demo – The Print Process

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