Specifications

COLORWISE PRINT OPTIONS 25
When you enable PDF/X Output Intent, you must set select the Use Embedded Profile
When Present (RGB) option so that the rendering intent embedded in the PDF/X file is used.
The PDF/X Output Intent and Use Embedded Profile When Present (RGB) options are
accessible from Expert Settings in the Color window of Job Properties.
RGB/Lab Rendering Intent
The RGB/Lab Rendering Intent option specifies a rendering intent for color conversions. To
control the appearance of images, such as prints from office applications or RGB photographs
from Photoshop, select the appropriate rendering intent. The EX700i allows you to choose
from the four rendering intents currently found in industry standard ICC profiles.
EX700i rendering intent Best used for Equivalent ICC
rendering intent
Photographic: Typically results
in less saturated output than
presentation rendering when
printing out-of-gamut colors. This
style preserves tonal relationships in
images.
Photographs, including scans and
images from stock photography
CDs and digital camera images.
Image, Contrast,
and Perceptual
Presentation:
Creates saturated
colors but does not match printed
colors precisely to displayed colors.
In-gamut colors, such as flesh
tones, are rendered well. This style is
similar to the Photographic
rendering intent.
Artwork and graphs in
presentations. In many cases, this
style can be used for mixed pages
that contain presentation graphics
and photographs.
Saturation,
Graphics
Relative Colorimetric:
Provides
white-point transformation between
the source and destination white
points. For example, the bluish
white color (gray) of a monitor is
replaced by paper white. This style
avoids visible borders between
blank spaces and white objects.
Advanced use when color matching
is important, but you prefer white
colors in the document to print
as paper white. This style may
also be used with PostScript color
management to affect CMYK
data for simulation purposes.
Relative
Colorimetric
Absolute Colorimetric:
Provides
no white point transformation
between the source and destination
white points. For example, the bluish
white color (gray) is not replaced
by paper white.
Situations when exact colors are
needed and visible borders are not
distracting. This style may also be
used with PostScript color
management to affect CMYK
data for simulation purposes.
Absolute
Colorimetric