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Printing things that I digitally color?
Whenever I color something in a graphic program, when I print it, it ALWAYS comes out bad. Like, the reds look a little TOO pink, green looks like greenish mud, blues aren't vibrant and bright. It doesn't have the same spark as I colored it. I learned a little about switching from RGB to CMYK to improve printing quality, but that doesn't help as much.
What can I do to set up my workstation to ensure that when I print out something I color, it looks as good as how I colored it on the monitor?
I have a LCD monitor, along with a old damaged CRT monitor that makes things look pretty dark.
Any help is very much appreciative.
2 Answers
- 1 decade agoFavorite Answer
you might want to always work in cymk when you know you are going to print it. maybe color calibrate your monitor, there should be a wizard to help you do so, this will help with getting accuracy in your colors from screen to paper. also if you can check the gamut warning it will indicate areas with too much saturation of a color to be reached by a printer. good lucks! yay 2points!
- Anonymous5 years ago
Kapeka - did you even difficulty examining the question?? As to the question - What factor do you like precisely? There are one hundred and one issues that ought to break a print. gentle, water, fingerprints, warmth, incorrect storage, form of paper etc etc.