Calibrating Both the Monitor and Printer:
DisplayMate was originally created to set up and tune up computer monitors 
and video displays for optimum image and picture quality. 
But DisplayMate's analytical test patterns are equally useful for setting up 
and calibrating printers and 
any other type of input or output imaging device that can be connected 
to a computer, such as, for example, a scanner or digital camera. 
This will be the subject of this article. 
Recommended by many publications:
DisplayMate has been recommended by many publications for calibrating printers, 
however, the product documentation concentrates on 
display calibration and includes only an abbreviated version of this 
lengthy article. So, we have prepared this article to help 
our customers and prospective customers understand how to use DisplayMate 
to calibrate printers as well as scanners and digital cameras. 
DisplayMate Improves Calibration Speed and Accuracy:
Calibrating the printer and monitor to one another is a pre-requisite 
for doing any sort of digital imaging or photography. But trying to 
calibrate using a photograph is virtually impossible 
because all of the complex colors, intensities, and textures make it 
difficult to comprehend exactly how each control that you tweak is affecting the 
image. With DisplayMate's analytical test patterns it's much easier to see 
what the problem areas are and how they are improved by varying 
each available control. 
Print the DisplayMate test patterns:
The DisplayMate test patterns are used in the same 
way as with a monitor, only now they are also printed, 
photographed and/or scanned. The test patterns allow you 
to accurately check, adjust, compare and match the gray-scales, 
color-scales and color gamuts of each device. 
Is There an Easy or Automatic Way?
People frequently ask if there is an easy or automatic way to calibrate 
the printer. The only way to do this is with expensive instruments 
that measure and analyze your monitor's and printer's output. 
Even when instruments are used, 
the final calibration and touch-ups must still be done 
by eye by visually comparing test patterns in the same way as we discuss here. 
In addition, instruments must still be manually calibrated at least once. 
So the answer is there is no easy or automatic method and any company or 
product claiming to do so will only give poor or erratic results!!! 
Do it only once:
While the calibration procedure can be time consuming, once 
completed it need not be repeated unless you make changes to 
your imaging devices or software. 
Note that minor adjustments may be necessary when you change inkjet cartridges 
because of manufacturing tolerances. 
 
This article is organized into the following headings: 
Preliminaries
Display and Printer Calibration

 
Preliminaries
 
 
Getting the display and printer to produce consistent color so that 
what you see on the display is what you get on the printer turns out 
to be a surprisingly difficult process. 
One reason is that the eye and brain are very sensitive and discriminating 
to subtle differences in color and intensity. 
Color reproduction involves the interaction of many complex parameters, 
each of which must be carefully accounted for and calibrated. 
The technologies involved are also very different and they give rise to 
significant differences in reproduction: 
 
-  The display has a much broader color gamut than the printer, so there are 
colors that can be displayed on your monitor that can not be accurately printed. 
 
-  The display uses additive RGB colored light given off by phosphors or filters, 
whereas the printed output uses subtractive absorption 
of the light reflected off the paper through CMYK pigments. 
 
-  The display has greater color saturation, dynamic range and contrast. 
Printed images generally appear darker and duller. 
 
-  The texture and brightness of the paper are also important factors. 
 
-  Printing is inherently nonlinear because of the layering 
and overlapping of the different inks and variations in the relative positions, 
sizes and profiles of the ink dots. 
Since the display is used as the visual reference in composing an image 
that will be printed, it is essential that these two very different 
imaging devices be brought into accurate colorimetric agreement with one another. 
Similar problems arise with input devices like scanners and digital cameras. 
This requires a somewhat lengthly calibration procedure, which we describe 
below. Fortunately, once the calibration procedure is completed it need not be 
repeated unless you make changes to the imaging devices or imaging software. 
Note that minor adjustments may be necessary when you change inkjet cartridges 
because of manufacturing tolerances. 
 
 
If you are using the Printer Driver that came installed with Windows 
instead of the custom driver that came with your printer, 
then you are probably missing important advanced controls provided 
by the printer's manufacturer. 
Those additional controls should simplify and improve the printer's calibration. 
So the first step is to make sure that you have installed the custom driver 
for your printer. To check, go to the Control Panel and select Printers. 
Right click on desired printer and select Properties. 
Look through all of the Tabs, paying particular attention to ones that 
say Color or Advanced. 
Look for controls like Ink Density, Color, Saturation, Brightness and Contrast. 
Details will vary with the manufacturer and model. 
If you haven't installed the proper driver then find the CD that came 
with the printer and install it. 
If you can't find the CD then go to the manufacturer's website and download it. 
 
 
For all imaging and photography work you need to set the video mode 
to 24-bit or 32-bit "True Color" in the Display Properties Dialog box. 
To do this right click on the desktop, select Properties and then Settings. 
 
-  Note: 32-bit color is just 24-bit color with an 8-bit pad, 
generally to improve speed performance. 
 
-  
Don't use 16-bit color
- it has a very coarse gray-scale 
(32 steps for Red and Blue and 64 steps for Green). 
Images will also acquire a slight Green caste because Green has twice as 
many steps as Red and Blue. 
 
-  If you have a choice, it's better to 
use a CRT monitor rather than an LCD, plasma or other display technology. 
CRTs provide the best overall color rendition. 

 
Display and Printer Calibration
 
 
| 4. First: Set Up Your Display | 
 
The first step is to properly calibrate your display because it's 
your working visual reference. 
Initially, this needs to be done independently of the printer. 
 
-  Set up your display for optimum image and picture quality using DisplayMate. 
 
-  Step through each DisplayMate test pattern and follow the 
on-screen instructions that explain what to look for in the image 
and what adjustments to make. 
 
-  Be sure to use 
All
of the display and video board controls available on your system. 
Carefully read your display and video board documentation 
for information on accessing and adjusting each of the controls. 
 
-  If your video board includes a "Gamma" control, set it to 1.0 (linear) 
so that it is not affecting the image at this stage. 
Note: this leaves the display's own internal Gamma in effect. 
 
-  Set the Color Temperature of the display to 6500° Kelvin, 
which is Daylight White. 
Color Temperatures of 3000° to 5000° are used in many 
photographic and graphics arts applications, but start out with 6500°, 
which is the standard for video. 
Note: most displays come from the factory set for 9300° Kelvin, 
which produces a brighter but bluer image. 
 
-  Be sure to record all the initial and final 
settings so you can recall and restore them later. 
 
 
| 5. Printer Calibration Introduction | 
 
Colors are processed through a series of software layers on the way to being 
printed. These include the printer driver, color management software (if any), 
and your image processing program (such as Adobe PhotoShop). 
The best way to proceed is to systematically turn on one layer at a time so 
that you're sure that each layer is improving rather than degrading the image. 
 
 
The first step is to set up your printer without introducing any effects from 
your color management or image processing software (such as Adobe Photoshop). 
We will bypass them now and then introduce them one-at-a-time later on. 
Set all the of printer and printer driver controls to their "factory defaults" 
and turn off any Color Management profiles or software. 
This is generally done through Printer Properties. 
Examine each of the Tabs for the appropriate controls settings. 
To begin the calibration process follow the instructions in step 7 using the 
available controls in the Printer Driver. 
 
 
| 7. How to Print and Compare the Test Patterns: | 
 
For this step we recommend that you use the Microsoft Paint program, 
which is included in all versions of Windows. 
This is a very simple program and we want to make sure that the 
test pattern images are not altered or processed in any way. 
Printer color fidelity should now be improved. 
 
 
| 8. Optional: Adding Color Management | 
 
An advanced color management system is, 
in principle,
the Holy Grail for accurate 
color reproduction among imaging devices such as displays, printers, scanners, 
cameras, etc. 
It is supposed to accurately transform and map all of the colors so they 
automatically appear the same on all the imaging devices in your system. 
Because printing, in particular, is a non-linear process the accuracy will 
depend on the sophistication of the color management algorithms and how well 
they were calibrated by the manufacturer. 
The best of these systems are very complex and expensive. 
In practice, many color management implementations do not work particularly 
well and may even degrade rather than improve color accuracy. 
Not all systems include Color Management. 
If yours does then we will figure out in this step whether you should 
leave it on or turn it off. 
Windows'95/98/Me/XP include basic color management support called 
Image Color Matching (ICM) that is designed to be used by all imaging devices. 
A manufacturer may include a calibrated profile that is supposed to 
accurately represent the colorimetric capabilities of their device. 
Of course, not all manufacturers and models support ICM. 
Some imaging devices may include their own proprietary color management 
capabilities that work alongside ICM. 
There are applications, such as Adobe Photoshop, 
that may include their own internal 
color management capabilities, which supplement ICM functionality. 
Finally, there are stand-alone color management applications that do their 
own calibrations and transformations. 
The next step is to turn on color management and see if it improves the 
color fidelity of the printed output we obtained without it in step 6, above. 
If you have icm (image color matching) profile files or advanced color 
management software, then activate these now and follow 
the How to Print and Compare Test Patterns in step 7 above, 
using the saved test pattern image files. 
If you're using icm profiles you should find them under a Color Management Tab 
in Printer Properties. 
You may need to select among various icm profiles or perform calibrations 
and adjust controls in your color management software. 
Again, this is an iterative process. 
Be sure you have the latest icm profiles for your devices. 
When you're done the printer's color fidelity should be further improved. 
If not, update, delete or replace the color management profiles and software. 
 
 
| 9. Calibration with Image Processing Software | 
 
If your Printer Driver and Optional Color Management haven't provided the 
desired color accuracy then you'll need to take advantage of the 
controls available in an image processing program. 
Adobe Photoshop is the most comprehensive and powerful of these, 
but even inexpensive programs generally provide many sophisticated adjustment 
tools to calibrate, correct and manipulate color hue, 
saturation and balance and brightness contrast, gray-scale, Gamma, etc. 
Some calibration tools will apply to the monitor and others to the printer. 
 
-  First set all of the program's controls to their neutral factory defaults 
so that the program will not alter the input image in any way. 
 
-  If you made any adjustments in the previous steps 6 to 8 then 
print one or more DisplayMate test patterns and verify that they 
are identical to the print samples obtained previously. 
This confirms that all of the image processing program controls are initially 
off or neutral. 
 
-  Following the instructions in step 7, print and compare the test patterns 
using the saved image files. 
Adjust each of the available calibration controls in the image processing 
program to further improve the accuracy. 
Again, this is an iterative process. 
Repeat the procedure until no further improvements are possible. 
 
-  Be sure to record all the settings so you can recall and restore them later. 
Printer color fidelity should now be further improved.
By this point you hopefully have a reasonably good match between your 
display and printer, but as pointed out previously, 
the color match won't be perfect because of fundamental differences between 
the different imaging technologies. 
If you're still not happy then print out the 
Comprehensive Long version of this article, 
which has additional steps and information. 
 
Short Lite Version:
This is the Short Lite version of the Printer Calibration article. 
A Comprehensive Long Version is also available that includes additional 
material for advanced or motivated users. 
Printing this article:
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