Xerox DocuColor 12 Printer with Fiery X12 产品宣传页

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Color Management
You need to account for the gamut of your print device when designing on a color 
monitor. When printed, colors that fall outside the print device gamut are “mapped” to 
printable colors. This process, referred to as gamut mapping, takes place when color 
data is converted or adjusted to meet the gamut requirements of a print device. 
The Fiery is specially designed to perform gamut mapping at high speed with high 
quality results. It provides these color management features automatically, using either 
built-in default settings or settings that you specify for a particular print job. For added 
flexibility, the Fiery color management system can also be used in combination with 
color management systems on Windows and Mac OS computers.
Basics of color management
The past several years have seen progress toward standardization in the field of digital 
color management systems. Both the Windows 95/98 and Mac OS operating systems 
now support a standard format developed by the International Color Consortium 
(ICC). This ICC format is implemented on Windows 95/98 and Windows NT 4.0 
computers in Image Color Matching (ICM) and on Mac OS computers in ColorSync. 
More and more software developers are also incorporating color management systems 
into high-end applications. The Fiery color management system, ColorWise, supports 
this industry standard profile format. 
A color management system, or CMS, is a “translator” between the color space of the 
source image (the monitor, or a scanner, for example) and the color space of the output 
device. The CMS uses a device-independent color space, such as CIELAB, as its 
intermediate color space. To perform its translation, the CMS needs information about 
the color space of the source image and the gamut of the print device. This 
information is provided in the form of profiles, often created by the makers of the 
monitor or print device. The end product of a CMS conversion is a printed document 
or an image file in the gamut of a particular device. 
N
OTE
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If color matching between computer display and printed output is critical, you 
should calibrate your monitor as well as your printer. For most users, predictability of 
printed color output is adequate and monitor calibration is not necessary. For 
information on monitor calibration, see your Photoshop or Illustrator documentation.