![]() ![]() The image where I noticed the problem is this one. Your question about the image itself is a good one because the issue is not obviously present when I print Keith Cooper's black and white test image. Printing using the Black and White mode works well despite my "black box" concerns, so figuring out what's going on with the ICC approach is mostly in the interesting of learning and understanding what's going on here.Īre these known test images or unique photos? I'm experiencing this on matte papers where I made the ICC, but also on Canon Photo Paper Pro Premium Matte using the Canon ICC - so I don't think it's an error in my own ICC. In both cases, the print made with the ICC is unusable - and especially so for the one made directly from Lightroom. When I print directly from Lightroom with the same ICC on the same paper, it's much worse - the bluish tone has moved into brighter values.Blacks are fine, and lighter than 10% is fine. When I use an ICC to print a monochrome image on the Pro-1000 on matte paper using Canon Professional Print and Layout, I get an ugly bluish tone for areas that are around 1% to 10% (so very dark grey).However, it's a bit of a black box approach, so I'm also exploring printing monochrome images via the ICC for the paper. I'm getting good results for black and white printing on matte paper using the black and white printing mode, through Canon Professional Print and Layout via Lightroom, and directly from the Lightroom Print module. ![]()
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