![]() ![]() Jeezuss, it's horrible! Your prints can sometimes be acceptable if you use OEM ink and OEM paper, but if you want to create a certain color, you really need to get profiles for your ink and papers. Coincidentally, I have right in front of me a print that I printed with 3rdparty inks and no profile. Even if your inks are the best in the world, if they're not OEM, you have to have profiles for them to do what you want them to. Even assuming that your monitor doesn't need calibration, the ink situation is a serious problem. The thing is, Dave, the software that someone uses is irrelevant in this case. Or perhaps that this color of blue is difficult to represent with printer ink. What could be helpful, and what I was hoping for was that someone who has the same printer and a Windows operating would take a look at the photo and tell me that he or she is able to print the photo satisfactorily, and in the software he uses, these are the color adjustments he makes. ![]() ![]() Well, actually, Dave, it can be helpful, you just need to know what to do with what he's told you. You know, Bob, it's not all that helpful for someone to tell me reasons why I'm having difficulty printing a photo. ![]()
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