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Adobe Creative Suite 5 Printing Guide 134
4. In the Color Management panel, set options for handling color:
•Color Handling: Determines if color management is used and whether
it happens in the application or at the printing device.
• Acrobat color management: Enables you to select an ICC Prole
that describes the target output device.
• Printer Color Management: Sends the document’s color data
along with the document prole directly to the printer and lets
the printer convert the document to the printer color space. e
exact results of the color conversion can vary among printers.
• Same as Source (No Color Management): Discards all color man-
agement information and sends device color to the printer.
•Color Prole: Determines the prole used for handling colors during
printing.
•Output Color: Species the output color space based on the seings in
the Output panel of the Advanced Print Setup dialog box.
•Treat grays as K-only grays: Renders gray-equivalent content (such as
R128-G128-G128) as black-only output.
•Preserve Black: Renders black-equivalent content (such as R-G-B)
as 1K. Prevent RGB black text from being rendered as a rich black.
•Preserve CMYK Primaries: When transforming CMYK content for a
dierent target print prole, aempts to preserve primaries (such as
C100 or M100-Y100). For single-colorant objects (such as M100),
Acrobat uses that colorant. For objects using more than one colorant
(such as C100-Y100), Acrobat aempts to minimize any color dier-
ence.
•Apply Output Preview Seings: Simulates the print space dened by
the device identied in the Simulation Prole menu of the Output
Preview dialog box. (Choose Advanced > Print Production > Output
Preview.) is option allows you to simulate the appearance of one
device on another.
Color Management
Choose color handling options, color proles, and proles for proong simulation.
5. If you want to save the seings you’ve selected in the Advanced
Print Setup dialog box, click Save As, and then name the seings
le. If you do not save the seings, Acrobat retains them only as
long as the document is open.
Click OK to close the Advanced Print Setup dialog box, and then click
OK to print.
Setting Up a PPD file
A PPD file contains information about the output device, including
printer-resident fonts, available media sizes and orientation, optimized
screen frequencies, resolution, and color output capabilities. Selecting
the PPD that corresponds to your PostScript printer or image setter
provides Acrobat with the available settings for the output device, and
determines which PostScript information is sent to the printer. For
example, fonts listed in your PPD file reside in the printer, so they are
not downloaded unless you explicitly include them.
Because so many advanced printing features depend on the PPD for
information, it’s important to set up the correct PPD before you print.
For best printing results, Adobe recommends that you obtain the latest
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