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Nimeshi706

: How to print a pure C , M , Y , K color using a regular inkjet printer? How to print a pure CMYK color in a regular printer? Let's say I would like to print a pure cyan or a pure magenta

@Nimeshi706

Posted in: #AdobeIllustrator #AdobePhotoshop #Cmyk #ColorProfile #PrintDesign

How to print a pure CMYK color in a regular printer? Let's say I would like to print a pure cyan or a pure magenta in a regular printer. first I work in a CMYK document .. but when sending the file to the printer it mix the colors and I didn't get a pure cyan or pure magenta. That's because of the printer driver which uses an RGB profile.

What I need is to print from the magenta only.

How to do that in Photoshop or Illustrator? and what color profile is suitable for that?

After all is it possible to print from only one color cartridge whatever it is?

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@Berryessa866

Only works if you've a way to map a given single color from one profile to another

I faced the same issue and I wanted to print from one cartridge to just unclog a few nozzles without wasting ink from the other cartridges.

My printer ICC profile was Epson sRBG. I believe any print work would be first mapped on to this RBG profile first and then the printer would convert that to it's own CMYK internally to fire from respective cartridges.

First Trial:
I tried printing a patch of color with RGB(255,0,255), thinking this should print perfect Magenta, but that was not the case.
Second Trial: Map CMYK(0,255,0,0) to Epson sRGB and print that patch of color. Almost there but not perfect yet. As obviously the CMYK profile I used was not the same as the printers and also I was using some cheap ink ;-)
Final Trial and Error:
So I tried to get the perfect RBG combination so that it prints from Magenta cartridge only, with target around CMYK(0,255,0,0).

I tried this exercise using all the below CMYK profiles for my test print...
WebCoatedFOGRA28
CoatedFOGRA27
Generic CMYK

What worked for me was Generic CMYK with a bit of trial and error. I printed multiple patches. I created a simple spreadsheet that would create my patches around the colors I required. Printed all patches on same sheet to finally choose the one I needed by the eye.
Here is the spreadsheet I used. Each color is fills 10 rows with details of the color mentioned. So I have like nine patches that gets to 90 rows to fill up a whole Letter/A4.

Also the way I went from one color profile to the other was by using the Color Sync Utility app on Mac. I'm sure there is a similar utility on windows for the same.

Let me know if you've a similar convertor utility for Windows, I will added it to the answer.

Cheers and happy printing!

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@Si6392903

I also tackled a very similar problem.
I was not getting pure Cyan output from my Epson WF-7520, even though it has CMYK cartridges because the printer was converting the CMYK source document to RGB before printout.

I was able to obtain a reasonably clean Cyan after converting the source document to RGB and setting the color to 'pure cyan' in RGB values, which apparently is R=0, G=255, B=255.

Here's the link to the complete Question/Answer thread.

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@LarsenBagley460

Your Inkjet printer has to support CYMK. Thus double check before you proceed. Otherwise colours are always converted to RGB. Also make sure that the latest printer drivers are installed.

You can export your Illustrator/photoshop file to a PDF file. This way you can open your document in Acrobat which offers advanced print settings like preview color separations. The Colour profile depends on the final medium e.g. coated, uncoated, newspaper... When you export your PDF make sure that you are using the same color profile e.g. sRGB or Adobe 1998.

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