sarahloyd wrote:Hi Joanna, I didn't think it was possible to print at 48 bit from Photoshop? Again I am probably revealing my deep ignorance
All I can tell you is that I have never found it necessary to change the bit depth of an image for printing purposes.
sarahloyd wrote:I have a lot of learning to do here
Well, you're certainly not on your own !! That's one of the great things about this group.
sarahloyd wrote:Do you find "Genuine Fractals" gives a better result than bicubic on photoshop, the photographic press seems to be ambiguous on this?
At small size increments, I don't think it makes too much difference but if you want to do something drastic, then GF seems to make things easier. Most opinions seem to say that PS resizing should be done in small steps to avoid artefacts but GF seems to be able to cope with fairly big resizing in a single step.
sarahloyd wrote:I colour manage all the way through my LF workflow calibrating screen, monitor and printer (for my media/ink combinations) and am reasonably confident that what I capture ends up on paper within the technical limits of my equipment (at least as far as colour management goes).
If you haven't profiled your scanner for the specific film that you are scanning, you will not yet appreciate how much difference this can make. After all, if you don't get the correct colours out of the tranny, you are not going to get the best results out of the rest of the process.
sarahloyd wrote:I use a working space of Adobe RGB
Adobe RGB is a very limited gamut colour space; it is intended mainly for web page rendition, not high quality manipulation and printing. If you don't use a scanner profile, how do you get a reasonable colour to start with ? My guess is that you are using the "automatic" adjustments provided on the scanner driver.
May I suggest you try converting one of your images to ProPhoto just to see the extra gamut that you should get ?
sarahloyd wrote:and I find that "softproofing" with the correct profile for the printer/media combination gives an excellent impression of how the final result will appear.
You certainly should have a good match between the screen and the print, but unless you profile the scanner, you may find differences between the tranny and both the screen and printer.
sarahloyd wrote:Do you know how beneficial it is (if at all) to send a resolution higher than 300dpi to printers that state they can handle it or would I be wasting my time?
I used to think that you should print at 28800 or 57600 because this should give a better image quality, but the truth is that it seems to make absolutely no difference at all, even down to 240dpi, which is the default resolution that PS uses nowadays.
I am hoping to get the V700 scanner; what made you go for the V750 rather than the V700 ? I would be interested to see if you think it is worth the extra.