Hello, Jean Delmas
you wrote...
> 1 - VuescanScan with "Color | ICC profile" set to "Canon1220U.icc"
> (ICC profile made with Vuescan)
>
> 2 - Vuescan with "Color|ICC profile" set to "Built-in"
>
> 3 - Scangear, regular Canon software
>
> 1-Vues-profiled 2-Vues-built-in 3-Scangear
> Grey No 12 16 20 Bk 12 16 20 Bk 12 16 20 Bk
> R 113 79 55 45 103 69 46 38 91 45 13 7
> V 107 72 45 35 102 68 42 33 94 55 17 9
> B 110 73 43 34 105 69 41 32 91 52 15 7
>
> These measurements results are quite strange for a non-expert like me.
> Main interesting conclusion is : red color cast is stronger on
> "profiled" scanner than on "non-profiled scanner" !!
>
> What is wrong ?
No Idea. But you did not mention what color balance you use in vuescan.
Please note that profiling is only useful with color balance neutral or
none.
Vuescan does no sophisticated IT8 profiling, it only adjusts gamma for
each color channel separately. If you want to eliminate color cast by
hand with your IT8 target (which is at least as good as vuescans
internal algorithm) you can do the following:
Preview your IT8 target. Right click on the white patch of the grey
scale (white point is set). Lock image color on the input tab. Adjust
black point manually to get true black for the black patch (something
like 15,15,15 is enough). Then adjust R and B brightness settings to
get a true grey for patch 12.
If you want to be exact, set Scan task to 'Make IT8 target' and set
Scan from File to the scanner IT8 data ("scanner.it8", if you renamed
the .txt file) supplied by Wolf Faust. Press preview and note down the
RGB values for the grey scale patches. Now try to use above mentioned
technique to adjust the scanned IT8 image to the desired values for
white, black and number 12 patch.
Note down all black and white point, color and brightness values from
the color tab and use them for subsequent scans.
If you want to make more sophisticated IT8 profiling, use lcms
profilers provided on
http://www.littlecms.com/profilers.htm
Please note, that lcms profiles are only valid, if you use exactly the
same color balance and RGB exposure settings as you did for scanning
the target. lcms profiles must be applied in photoshop (or other icc
aware app) - vuescan can not read them, although it does not complain.
--
Erik Krause
Digital contrast problems:
http://www.erik-krause.de/contrast