《Gamut mapping and the printing of digital color images》.pdf
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Color Gamut Mapping and the Printing
of Digital Color Images
MAUREEN C. STONE
Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
WILLIAM B. COWAN
National Research Council of Canada
and
JOHN C. BEATTY
University of Waterloo
Principles and techniques useful for calibrated color reproduction are defined. These results are
derived from a project to take digital images designed on a variety of different color monitors and
accurately reproduce them in a journal using digital offset printing. Most of the images printed were
reproduced without access to the image as viewed in its original form; the color specification was
derived entirely from calorimetric specification. The techniques described here are not specific to
offset printing and can be applied equally well to other digital color devices.
The reproduction system described is calibrated using CIE tristimulus values. An image is
represented as a set of three-dimensional points, and the color output device as a three-dimensional
solid surrounding the set of all reproducible colors for that device, called its gamut. The shapes of the
monitor and the printer gamuts are very different, so it is necessary to transform the image points to
fit into the destination gamut, a process we call gamut mopping. This paper describes the principles
that control gamut mapping. Included also are some details on monitor and printer calibration, and
a brief description of how digital halftone screens for offset printing are prepared.
Categories and Subject Descriptors: 1.3.4 [Computer Graphics]: Graphics Utilities; 1.4.3 [Image
Processing]: Enhancement
General Terms: Algorithms, Exper
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