I  use ColorSynch for printing, so I'm not sure how this relates. I do 
all processing on a 16-bit file in Pro Photo Color Space, which is said 
to be an even wider gamut than Adobe 98. I save that original. If I'm 
going to print a file, I convert it to Generic RGB, then convert to 8 
bit,. I select the profile for my paper in the print box, turn on 
Colorsynch management in the print box and hit the button. I'm printing 
on an Epson 2200. I get beautiful results this way. I'm not sure if I 
could do better some other way. But past experiments have always led me 
right back to this method.
Paul
On Sep 6, 2006, at 11:53 PM, Godfrey DiGiorgi wrote:

> I always do profile conversions in 16bit. You can see the histograms
> jump more when you go to 8bit.
>
> If you tell Photoshop to let the printer do the color management, the
> image data is reduced to 8bit on the way to the print driver *before*
> profile conversion, meaning more shifts will be apparent. When
> Photoshop is managing the process, it converts to 8bit as the final
> step before sending to the driver, which is in pass through mode.
>
> Godfrey
>
> On Sep 6, 2006, at 3:35 PM, Paul Stenquist wrote:
>
>> I doubt that any is from the bit depth, unless Godfrey is emphasizing
>> the importance of starting with a 16-bit file and doing all the
>> processing in 16 bit. Whether PhotoShop converts to 8-bit before
>> printing or while printing would seem to make no difference.
>> Obviously, color space can make a difference with many images.
>> Starting with a 16-bit file is important, but at some point PhotoShop
>> has to convert.
>
>
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