Go to the File menu and select Save As shift + ctrl + S (PC) -OR- shift + command + S (Mac). Then we are going to save our print ready file. This combines all of your layers into one layer. To do it, click on the padlock icon near the layer. photoshop print settings for sublimation. Go to the Layer menu and select Flatten Image alt + shift + ctrl + F (PC) -OR- ctrl + shift + E (mac).
Then, you need to unlock a layer in Photoshop. Any help and advice would be much appreciated. Make the background layer invisible by clicking on the eyeball icon. Select the printer at the top of the Preview window. Try the following steps to see if this helps: 1. I used to have an Oki and could see all the percentages for the RGB and CMYK etc. Printing from Photoshop CS5 is an entirely different process than previous versions of Photoshop. Please, please can somebody help me out? The printing interface from Xerox is extremely limiting (and really slow for some reason) and I just don't know where to really get into all the colours settings.
We installed PCL6 drivers as that was one of the things that improved colours when working from the Mac but it's made no difference here.
I am on Windows 7.Ĭurrently I have it set to Printer Manages Colours. JPEG's saved at high quality settings (low compression) can be OK for print, file sizes are certainly more sensible. PDFs are certainly usable for print but if they just contain jpeg raster images, then I can't see the point of putting them inside a PDF.
We can manage most colours from our first Phaser (I also have a thread open on this as it won't print blue) but as that one is connected to a Mac I just don't know how to replicate any settings from there. The usual standard for the print industry is CMYK TIF, but file sizes are large. Does anybody have any experience with using Photoshop please? I've called Xerox and they haven't a clue. We've just purchased a second Xerox Phaser 7800 printer and try as we might we cannot get any colours to reproduce from Photoshop (red is brown).