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Photoshop CS6 started it and Photoshop CC continues with a new behavior of prefiltering your printer profiles to show only the type of output profiles relevant to your chosen printer-meaning if your printer is considered an RGB printer (as most all inkjet printers are, even if they use blends of CMYK inks), only RGB profiles will show up in your profile menu. The dialog box is broken up by the panel areas for the various settings you must select. If mine looks a bit different, I suspect it’s because of some of the options I’ve chosen (which I’ll highlight later). Figure 4.8 shows the main Photoshop Print Settings dialog. It’s just the print properties versus print settings that are different. In essence, the options are identical on Mac and Windows. Photoshop engineers have done a pretty good job of making the print dialog boxes the same across platforms. Starting at the top, in the Printer Setup area, it’s self-apparent to select the correct printer. So, how not to screw up? I’ll walk you through the dialog box so you know how to get the results you want. Thinking about it that way gives you a healthy degree of respect for the medium and the substrate. What he meant was that someone has put a great deal of time and craftsmanship into creating this great piece of paper, so don’t screw it up. When I was young, I had an art instructor who said you are embellishing the art of a previous artist whenever you put pencil to paper. You have to make absolutely sure you’ve got each one correctly set miss one and you’ve ruined your expensive fine art print. On the right are all the settings that you have to master. The Photoshop Print Settings dialog box is a relatively complex and powerful print control center. Digital Print, The: Preparing Images in Lightroom and Photoshop for Printing
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