With both these profiles, LR, knowing the values in the file to print, will be able to soft proof the print result, and convert correctly the values being send to the printer in order to get a result on the paper as close as possible of what you see on your screen. It will allow LR to know what this trio can do and how it will restitute the colors. Your must have a profile for the trio printer/ink/paper. The screen profil will allow LR to convert the values send to the screen so the color displayed will be close to what is stored in the photo. To work properly, there are prerequisits : The purpose of soft proofing is to emulate (as much as possible) on your screen what you will see on your paper. Yes, it's the same profile used in LR for soft proofing and for printing. Thanking you so much in advance for any information and clarity that you might be able to provide. When you are using an ICC profile for your paper for print, what color management are you turning off - the printer or LR? Then if that is the case, how are you suppose to use Adobe RGB for editing if you cannot change the color space in LR? If I am correct in this statement, I believe that you can no longer change the color space in Lightroom to sRGB or Adobe RGB for it only uses ProPhoto RGB. Should I change from D65 to D50 and bring down to intensity to 90? At this point I am not sure what settings I should be changing in order to get my prints to match what I am seeing on the screen. Also, I believe the screen is still a little brighter then the picture that was printed out. I have read that calibrating to D50 is a better match for printing. I used an ICC profile for my paper and turned off color management to none. When I printed out a picture, it looked a little duller and the color of the grass was much yellower then what was showing on the screen though the colors looked great on the screen. Currently the monitor is calibrated using SprectraView ii to D65, Gamma 2.2, Intensity 100 cd/m and contrast ratio of 250:1. I have a NEC PA 243W monitor, a Canon Pixma Pro 100 printer and using Windows 10 and Lightroom Classic latest version.
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