Rendering intent: Absolute colorimetric
Absolute colorimetric is similar to relative colorimetric, but uses a different method to handle
the white point.
Absolute and relative colorimetric both keep gamut colors and clip those out of gamut, but ab-
solute colorimetric also keeps the white point.
Absolute colorimetric is advised for "proofing" applications, that require a good color match,
but also emulation of paper white. As a result of that, white areas can become yellowish, be-
cause the printer tries to emulate the whitepoint of the input profile.
This setting provides the highest accuracy in rendering RGB colors into CMYK colors, including
rendering the source's white.
NOTE
You can see the minor level of blue of the monitor background as a bluish white in
the lightest tones of the printed output. A minor yellow tone can occur in the white
tones of a PDF/TIFF original or an HP-GL type document.
Rendering intent: Absolute colorimetric
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Chapter 3 - Define your Workflow with Océ Express WebTools
Summary of Contents for ColorWave 500
Page 1: ...Operation guide Océ ColorWave 500 ...
Page 4: ......
Page 10: ...Contents 10 ...
Page 11: ...Chapter 1 Introduction ...
Page 16: ...Available documentation 16 Chapter 1 Introduction ...
Page 17: ...Chapter 2 Get to Know the Printing System ...
Page 49: ...Chapter 3 Define your Workflow with Océ Express WebTools ...
Page 177: ...Chapter 4 Use the Printing System ...
Page 253: ...Chapter 5 Maintain the Printing System ...
Page 282: ...Calibrate the scanner 282 Chapter 5 Maintain the Printing System ...
Page 283: ...Chapter 6 License Management ...
Page 289: ...Chapter 7 Account Management ...
Page 297: ...Chapter 8 Solve Problems ...
Page 310: ...Print a test print 310 Chapter 8 Solve Problems ...
Page 311: ...Chapter 9 Support ...
Page 317: ...Chapter 10 Contact ...
Page 329: ......