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The profile needs to be made with the same technology as the photo you scan. OTOH, if you scan, for instance, a 4圆" photo then print it as a 4圆" print, how closely do you wish them to match under the same light? That's when you need to ICC profile the scanner. If what you are trying to achieve is a visually "perfect match" then you have to ask match what? Matching something you scan to something appearing on a monitor is problematic at best. I have a V850 as well and the default Adobe RGB scans are reasonably good. Have I missed something?ĭepends on what you are trying to achieve. Sadly, for all that effort, the default Adobe RGB profile worked better than the custom profiles so I'm not sure what all the fuss is about. Then I assigned the Epson profile and printed it, and finally I assigned no particular profile but my standard Adobe RGB default. I peoperly made the profiles using the targets supplied and then opened the reflective target file in Photoshop assigning it to the Xrite profile and printing it using my already profiled printer. I got the V850 Pro scanner with the Silverfast software and the i1 Scanner profiler from Xrite.
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