Hi,
I've had an HP Designjet 130 NR for about 6 years now. Though I've had some issues with it, by and large it's paid it's way and I've printed some fantastic stuff through it.
The latest issue is really foxing me though.
What is happening is that upper midtone/shadow areas of a certain value are coming out green. I've measured the area in question on the image and it seems to be in the areas which are about 45/45/45 RGB in value. The rest of the image is fine, good, smooth tones in both shadow and highlight areas.
At first I thought it was a Photoshop issue, perhaps not interpreting the profile properly. In most cases, I retain an Adobe RGB image and let Photoshop handle colour conversion, through the HP Photo Satin (Max Detail) profile on output. I output on the correct paper (HP Premium Plus Photo Satin) with the correct driver settings. I have always done it this way, as advised by Adobe and HP and up until fairly recently, never had any problems. The printer features closed-loop internal calibration which I have run and shows no issues.
Tried it through the non-Max Detail profile as well, no difference.
I'm printing a lot of mountaineering photos at the moment, and this seems to show up the problems particularly badly, due to their naturally "grayscale" nature, i.e. it's lots of rock in various shades, and snow which is either various shades of off white/grey or blown out highlights.
Anyway, to eliminate PS and the Mac from the equation, I took the image over to my Windows PC, opened up the image using Nero PhotoSnap (a basic image viewer/editor), and output the image again, through the PC version of the HP driver and through the same output profile. Same problem.
Took it back to the Mac, ran a profile conversion from Adobe RGB to sRGB (just to be sure) and output it, this time selecting "Printer Manages Colors" in PS and "ColorSmart/sRGB" in the HP driver.
Image prints without any sign of odd green tint this time, but very poorly colour matched of course in comparison to earlier prints.
That leads to to conclude that the HP output profiles are duff, because I chose the same output profile on both the Mac and the PC.
Anybody experienced similar problems?
I've had an HP Designjet 130 NR for about 6 years now. Though I've had some issues with it, by and large it's paid it's way and I've printed some fantastic stuff through it.
The latest issue is really foxing me though.
What is happening is that upper midtone/shadow areas of a certain value are coming out green. I've measured the area in question on the image and it seems to be in the areas which are about 45/45/45 RGB in value. The rest of the image is fine, good, smooth tones in both shadow and highlight areas.
At first I thought it was a Photoshop issue, perhaps not interpreting the profile properly. In most cases, I retain an Adobe RGB image and let Photoshop handle colour conversion, through the HP Photo Satin (Max Detail) profile on output. I output on the correct paper (HP Premium Plus Photo Satin) with the correct driver settings. I have always done it this way, as advised by Adobe and HP and up until fairly recently, never had any problems. The printer features closed-loop internal calibration which I have run and shows no issues.
Tried it through the non-Max Detail profile as well, no difference.
I'm printing a lot of mountaineering photos at the moment, and this seems to show up the problems particularly badly, due to their naturally "grayscale" nature, i.e. it's lots of rock in various shades, and snow which is either various shades of off white/grey or blown out highlights.
Anyway, to eliminate PS and the Mac from the equation, I took the image over to my Windows PC, opened up the image using Nero PhotoSnap (a basic image viewer/editor), and output the image again, through the PC version of the HP driver and through the same output profile. Same problem.
Took it back to the Mac, ran a profile conversion from Adobe RGB to sRGB (just to be sure) and output it, this time selecting "Printer Manages Colors" in PS and "ColorSmart/sRGB" in the HP driver.
Image prints without any sign of odd green tint this time, but very poorly colour matched of course in comparison to earlier prints.
That leads to to conclude that the HP output profiles are duff, because I chose the same output profile on both the Mac and the PC.
Anybody experienced similar problems?