On Sat, 07 Aug 2004 12:05:11 GMT, "Rene Lamontagne" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:
>
>
>
>"beezer" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> On Sat, 07 Aug 2004 01:14:47 GMT, "Rene Lamontagne" <(E-Mail Removed)>
>> wrote:
>>
>>>Am using Photoshop CS. The file that I was given is a greyscale scan, it
>>>is
>>>fine and true on the monitor, but the Canon S900 prints it with a cyan
>>>cast,
>>>if i add magenta or subtract cyan it invariosly goes too far and I get a
>>>magenta cast, the best I can get is using plain paer setting, highest
>>>quality, this improves it slightly.
>>>I cannot justify getting the Lyson Quad black inkset for the few B&W
>>>prints
>>>I make.
>>>What I need is someway to make the printer use black instead of Photo Cyan
>>>and Magenta to make black(knowing this may be impossible) maybe.
>>>
>>> Thanks,Rene Lamontagne
>>
>>
>> Ok... have you tried printing on proofing paper to ensure your paper
>> is not causing the shift? If its definately not the paper then try
>> this , it may get you close to what you want.
>>
>> open the picture in ps. Set the working mode to RGB.
>> make a hue/saturation adjustment layer.
>> check the colorize box
>> set hue to 187
>> saturation to 6
>>
>> I think that may put you close to what you need by judging the shift
>> you are describing.
>>
>>
>
>Thanks Beezer, Yes that helps a lot, I find 9 seems about right for
>saturation and 199 for hue seems not too bad.
>Will play the numbers and proof some more to fine tune it and see how it
>works out.
>
>Thanks again, Rene Lamontagne
>
Any time... Glad to help. I just just eyeballing it on a bw image on
my end to try and replicate what you were seeing, looks like i wasnt
too far off, LOL
By the way, sepia tones are very popular, perhaps with a gradient as
well if your pure BW doesnt work out.... try the hue in the 130's for
that, LOL
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