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Sometimes photos would appear a
little frustrating especially when there is no transparency to match color. The reason to this is that printing
companies have been slow in going with the flow to accommodate new images. They
often stumbles through their conversions to CMYK which causes irreparable
damage to the images.
In the article When Good Color Goes Bad by
Mike Davis, it enumerated some tips on how to seize the full
potential of your digital images. Davis
advised to work with digital photographers who can supply the following:
1. FPO
images for you to place in your layout plus the original raw
files. These contain the virgin pixel captures straight from high-end digital
cameras, prior to any conversion to RGB or any subsequent processing/encoding.
You will need someone skilled to handle them, though.
2.
Properly tagged RGB tiff images -- again, a skilled operator will
be needed for best results.
3. CMYK
tiffs prepared by a knowledgeable photographer. When feasible,
separations should be prepared from the raw camera files, using the commercial
printer's own printing profile settings if available, or at very least using
Photoshop's "U.S. Prepress Defaults" with appropriate print
environment settings (i.e. coated, uncoated, Web, sheetfed, newsprint, ink
density, etc.).
Mike Davis, the author of
the said article, is the founder of Colorprep. He specializes in making digital
camera color separations look their best, serving printers, graphic designers
and photographers. He is fully experienced with color
preparation on any sort of printed work, be it adwork for publication, sheetfed
commercial work, newsprint publications, as well as for backlit displays,
outdoor boards, and the likes. In 1982, he underwent training at E. I. DuPont
for direct screen color separations. In 1992 he joined Baltimore service bureau Graphic Detail, Inc. in order to get in on the upcoming
digital revolution and say goodbye to rubylith, paste-ups and opaqueing. Lately
Mike recognized the coming demise of film in commercial photography and the
lack of qualified prepress operators able to bring out the full potential of
the new digital camera images. After studying color management from a prepress
operator's viewpoint, Mike went solo in 2003. If you want help to achieve
excellent colors in you prints, contact Colorprep. He can
also be reached by calling (410) 549-5564 or by visiting www.rgbcmyk.net.
Preferably, images should
be scaled to your layout and sharpened for the specific print conditions. You
may even ask for the full size CMYK or RGB tiffs without the final press
sharpening or any significant press gain compensation for later use at other
sizes.
To avoid discrepancies,
deal only with prepress who understands the basics in color management,
hardware calibrated displays and proper working environments. Skilled personnel
secure the quality of your photos so you’ll be assured of your precious
memories.
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