C9300/C9500 Operation • 314
– Perceptual
Best choice for printing photographs. Compresses the
source gamut into the printer's gamut while maintaining the
overall appearance of an image.
– Saturation
Best choice for printing bright and saturated colors if you
don't necessarily care how accurate the colors are. This
makes it the recommended choice for graphs, charts,
diagrams etc. Maps fully saturated colors in the source
gamut to fully saturated colors in the printer's gamut.
– Relative Colorimetric
Good for proofing CMYK color images on a desktop printer.
Much like Absolute Colorimetric, except that it scales the
source white to the (usually) paper white; i.e. unlike
Absolute Colorimetric, this attempts to take the paper white
into account.
– Absolute Colorimetric
Best for printing solid colors and tints, such as Company
logos etc. Matches colors common to both devices exactly,
and clips the out of gamut colors to their nearest printed
equivalent. Tries to print white as it appears on screen. The
white of a monitor is often very different from paper white,
so this may result in color casts, especially in the lighter
areas of an image.
c. Color Control = No Color Matching
Use this option to switch off all printer color matching.
d. Color Control = Print in Grayscale
This option prints all documents as monochrome.