ImagePrint RIP
Finally, Quality Black & White Digital Prints
If
you're anything like me, you have wasted time, paper, and ink, and pulled
hair out trying to achieve the perfect print from your digital files--especially
neutral black and white prints. There are many solutions available, some that
are very specific in nature, and others that cover a broad range of needs. One
of these solutions and the focus of this report is ImagePrint, published by
ColorByte Software (www.colorbytesoftware.com).
Currently at Version 5.6, the new release, Version 6.0, should be shipping by
the time you read this.
ColorByte markets two levels of functionality with ImagePrint. A Lite version,
reviewed here, with support for the Epson 1270/1280/1290 dye-based ink jets
and the Epson 2000P/2100/2200 pigment-based ink jets, sells for $495. The Full
version features additional printer support, including the large format Epson,
Roland, HP, and Iris printers along with Postscript support, picture package
templates, auto-print for shared printing, and the ability to tile across multiple
pages. It ranges in price from $790-$5995. Upgrades are available from the Raster
version to the Postscript version as well.
My testing was done on a Windows XP system with the Epson 2200 printer. ImagePrint
also supports Windows 2000 and Macintosh OS 10.2 or later. Some features of
ImagePrint are available only for the Epson UltraChrome inks used by the 2200/7600/9600
printers--I'll get to these extra "goodies" in a bit.
What Is ImagePrint?
First, ImagePrint is not a replacement for your image-editing application. While
some control over contrast, color, and such are available, you are best served
by preparing your image in Photoshop or its equivalent.
ImagePrint is, however, a masterfully implemented color managed environment
that focuses on printed output. ImagePrint bypasses the fragile color management
chain of OS, image-editing application, printer driver. Just open or drop your
edited image in ImagePrint, select the appropriate printer profile and print.
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ImagePrint is a RIP (Raster Image
Processor) that talks directly to your printer. The advantage to this method
is three-fold. First, ImagePrint uses very high quality profiles designed to
match your specific printer, paper, and ink. Second, ImagePrint manages multiple
print jobs--you can place multiple images on a page and each can have separate
profile settings. Finally, ImagePrint has very versatile layout options to give
you complete control over placement of single or multiple images to take full
advantage of your expensive paper.
The quantity and quality of the printer profiles cannot be beat unless you are
willing to spend $10,000 or more on a spectrocolorimeter and create your own.
Even then I think you'd be challenged to improve on ColorByte's
profiles. Along with a broad assortment of profiles that ship with the product,
ColorByte is constantly adding new profiles which you can download from their
website. I've found that the profiles for the Ilford and Hahnemühle
papers that I normally use have been better than anything I've seen elsewhere.
Getting Started
If you're one of those who don't read manuals (like me), this is
one time that you'll want to break that rule. ImagePrint has a wealth
of options available at installation time and choosing the correct ones will
save frustration later. ColorByte is evidently a bit paranoid about theft. ImagePrint
requires the use of a security dongle so you'll need a free USB port to
complete the installation. To activate the program, you need to log onto the
ColorByte website and get an activation key, which is then stored with the dongle.
ImagePrint has a lot of functionality. Luckily, ColorByte provides plenty of
help--there is an animated tutorial that will walk you through the process
of using ImagePrint's tools. In addition, there is an extensive manual
in PDF format that is well written and I suggest you print a copy out for reference.
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