Xerox Phaser 300X 安装指南

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页码 255
Correcting Printed Colors
6
Printing Reference
6-3
Color correction descriptions
Turning off all color corrections
If you do not want to use any TekColor color corrections, you can specify no 
corrections from a supported driver or with utility files.  Select no 
corrections when you are doing the following:
Using applications that do their own color adjusting
Using ColorSync on a Macintosh or host color correction in 
Windows
Printing PANTONE Colors   
 
Printing the brightest colors and a truer blue
The Vivid Color option is the best choice for typical office printing.  This 
option also makes printed blue appear less purple by reducing the amount 
of magenta used to print blue colors.  Other colors in the cyan-blue-purple- 
magenta range in the image are also adjusted to compensate for the adjusted 
blue.  Colors in the red-orange-yellow-green range are not affected.  This 
selection is good for making presentation graphics, such as overhead 
transparencies, and for bright-looking colors that don’t need to match the 
screen’s colors or printing press colors.      
Vivid Color
 adjusts CMYK colors using a method that adds black to other 
components.  This option prints more saturated (darker) colors and may be 
useful for printing overhead transparencies for presentations from some 
applications, such as CorelDRAW!.  Use this option if you have specified a 
color in the CMYK system, and the color has a black component, and the 
color appears lighter than you expected when printed. 
  
  
Simulating display screen colors
The Simulate Display option makes printed colors approximate the colors 
on a standard display screen.  This selection should improve the 
screen-to-printer color accuracy for most applications that don’t perform 
their own color corrections.  This selection is best for applications that define 
colors as RGB (red, green, blue), HLS (hue, lightness, saturation), or HSB 
(hue, saturation, brightness).