> Date: Wed, 01 Dec 2010 23:10:22 +0000 > From: Jim Ford<jaford at watford53.freeserve.co.uk> > Subject: Re: [scribus] Printer Profiles? Jim,
I just finished my first book project of 50+ pages with over 25 large photos. I used the Epson Workforce 40--the inks are pigment-based and archival. Scribus 1.3.3.14, Win XP sp3. Printed on archival paper, the book is a collection of exhibition-quality photos that tell a story; I am fussy about color (without needing to take a meter to my prints!). I could also use my Epson Sylus R2400--essentially the same inks, can print larger sheets, but the Workforce is more than enough quality and easier to work with for a job like this. For color management: all photos are in Adobe RGB. I process them using Adobe Bridge and Photoshop, copy them to the appropriate size for the book at 100 dpi, put them all into a single folder and import into Scribus. Windows provides a thumbnail view of the images which makes it easy to import into Scribus. (I wanted to keep file size down but now realize I could have built the book with higher resolution images and controlled output file size when exporting to PDF). I export as a PDF and view/print using Adobe Reader X. When printing, line up the printing specs in both Adobe Reader and your printer. Example: in Adobe Reader, choose File:Print. Select your printer, Properties. On main screen: choose the quality of image, i.e., photo or best photo; the paper type. Under Advanced: Color Management, select Color Controls; Color Mode: Adobe RGB. The printer also gives you the option of ICM color management. Jerry Halberstadt > > But as far as I'm aware, Adobe Reader doesn't use printer colour > management! Photographic images embedded into a Scribus file and > exported to pdf don't print accurately - at least not for me on my Epson > inkjet. > > Jim Marie, kindly refer to my workflow description under "printer profiles." (Adobe Bridge is an old precursor of Lightroom but a weaker program overall.) I suggest you consider getting Lightroom 3--it is finally being discounted heavily so mere mortals can afford it. Not only does it have great tools for "developing" your images (controls for color, levels, contrast etc) but it does a good job of sorting and retrieving: you can assign a quality grade and a color, so you can pull up all pictures of top grade on a specific subject. You can use this along with Photoshop to prepare your images for import to Scribus. I would say that for the project of over 200 pictures that Lightroom would be a boon to your staying sane. Once you have the photos chosen and sorted, you could copy them into folders named by book section or subject matter so you won't have to run through 200 photos every time you import one. Another tool for finding and sorting images is the free Picassa from Google; I do not recommend it for processing but it is helpful to find photos whose date or origin you may have forgotten. I have not tried the Scribus image manager. Jerry Halberstadt > Message: 6 > Date: Thu, 2 Dec 2010 08:30:53 +0100 > From: Marie-No?lle Augendre<mnaugendre at gmail.com> > Subject: [scribus] Organizing pictures before inserting them in a book > Now, I want to work on a larger project involving about 200-300 photos, and > I'm looking for a tool to organize the photos before actually putting them > in Sribus pages. I would like to display as many photo thumbnails as > possible in a window, and be able to sort them manually. When I'm satisfied > with the order, I will have to register it someway (renaming the files is > possible), so I only have to import them, one by one, in image frames in > Scribus. > >> From what I saw, Scribus images manager only allows sorting by filename or > document page. Unless there is a function I have not yet discovered? Or a > plugin, may be? > Or somebody can give hints about other tools I could use, or other ways to > do the job? > > Thanks for helping, > Marie-No?lle > -- All the best, Jerry Jerry Halberstadt "Seeing the story, making a difference." * Photography * Writing * Publishing *Consulting http://HealthyResources.com * http://www.NewTechPub.com http://LivingWithAge.com * http://www.PhotoLuminations.com
