Sunday, 22 March 2015

Photography Workshop- 18th March

This was our last photography workshop and today we were looking at printing. Beytan asked us to bring up two prints; one from the studio lighting task, and one from the five images task.



He explained to us the printing process, and how we were going to achieve the result we wanted. He also went through colour calibration manually and with a hardware calibrator in order to allow us to see our images as closely to what was going to be printed as possible.

In order to prepare our images for print, we firstly had to look at our proof setup to ensure it was simulating the right color space and set our rendering intent:





Once we had chosen this, we could then add a sharpening filter if we chose to do so.



With the sharpening filters, you can choose high pass, which will sharpen according to a set radius on a moveable bar. The result is a light sharpen if you choose a small radius such as 1.5 shown here. However I found that I would like it to be sharpened more, and so I chose to use mexican hat sharpening which involves physically putting the values in, however it is mathematically correct in the way it sharpens the image.


Without Mexican Hat


With Mexican Hat

This is an extreme view, and it is much more subtle when looking at the image as a whole, however for me it greatly improved the overall look of the image.

Now we could start to setup our print settings to match the paper, colour profile, printer, rendering intent, and 

The most important thing here was to make sure that photoshop was managing the colours so that the colours would be accurate to what I see on the screen, and to make sure that the rendering intent, and paper are the same as what I am using to get an accurate result.

Once I had made my first print, I placed it on the keyboard with the image on the screen so that I could compare them and determine whether my print was successful.






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