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I generally let the Canon Printer manage colors, and I make sure to double check that setting is selected in the color management area when trying to print from Lightroom or Photoshop.
With the larger Canon printer(s) you upload your color profile with the Canon Media Configuration Tool to the printer. After that you leave the printer to manage the color.
Hi, I have had very similar results when I have loaded the paper the wrong way round with a new printer.
Thanks Koraks!The problem you show seems to me to be a case of color management gone fantastically wrong with the printer misinterpreting the color data.
I'd suggests to change this and instead allow Photoshop/Lightroom to take control over color management. There are plenty of YouTube vids on how to set up Photoshop for a soft-proofed, color-managed print workflow; I'd suggest to start there.
If you really don't want to mess with color profiles in Photoshop for some reason, be sure to convert everything you print into sRGB upon opening and remain editing in that space. This is a default space and odds are that your printer will interpret it OK if you don't let the applications manage colors. It's likely what happens 'under the hood' in your successful example of using the photo viewer app on your mac.
Welcome to Photrio btw!
I'm not sure about the 'Image Pro 100' mentioned by OP, but I was acting on the assumption that it's the somewhat older Canon PIXMA PRO-100. I'm not sure whether that one already supported the workflow you mention.
Are those three images the entire print? Or are there parts of the prints that aren't fuzzy?
No these were just the left side of the print, but generally representative of the color issues.
So maybe there's some weird handoff going on between LR and PS...
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