Hi everyone,
I have a question I've been trying to figure out for a while now in regards to professionally printing renders.
Obviously Max always outputs renders to an RGB colour format and there is no way to change this except to convert the image to CMYK afterwards in post. Even doing this though I never seem to get the colours that I am trying to achieve.
I have experimented with ICC colour profiles to compensate for our printers settings, and have also recently tried an Eye-one Display 2 Monitor calibrating tool to see if this helps, but nothing seems to get very close and I find myself having to almost delibratly make my images look awful in photoshop before printing, or they will come out too dark, or mismatched colours... etc.
Obviously this then double the workload as I have to have renders in RGB to send to a client by email which look good, and a second set to do large prints for mounting boards, which even then tend to look a fair bit different.
I was hoping someone who works a lot with professional print from Vray would have some insight into this, perhaps give me a walk-through of your work flow?
Thanks
Dan
I have a question I've been trying to figure out for a while now in regards to professionally printing renders.
Obviously Max always outputs renders to an RGB colour format and there is no way to change this except to convert the image to CMYK afterwards in post. Even doing this though I never seem to get the colours that I am trying to achieve.
I have experimented with ICC colour profiles to compensate for our printers settings, and have also recently tried an Eye-one Display 2 Monitor calibrating tool to see if this helps, but nothing seems to get very close and I find myself having to almost delibratly make my images look awful in photoshop before printing, or they will come out too dark, or mismatched colours... etc.
Obviously this then double the workload as I have to have renders in RGB to send to a client by email which look good, and a second set to do large prints for mounting boards, which even then tend to look a fair bit different.
I was hoping someone who works a lot with professional print from Vray would have some insight into this, perhaps give me a walk-through of your work flow?
Thanks
Dan
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