Good suggestion thank you, but it didn't solve the problem. I closed PS. I downloaded the print driver (from Epson). I restarted my computer. I started up PS. Tried to print. Still missing most of the Epson profiles, example EPSON premium photo glossy.

If you do see ICC profiles, they should also show up in Photoshop etc. But you can 'force' the issue by moving them out of this package and with your other ICC profiles. But first, do you see any of this?


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I have the same issue with 3880 printer. But since the update to MacOs 11.6.2 this trick not working. I look like lightroom/photoshop/colorsync recognize only 4 of the epson profiles, all the others are ignore.

The comment in another thread below about Apple increasing data validation on ICC profiles in os 11.6.2 is almost certainly the answer. It appears only the very newest Epson profiles pass that check and MacOS is rejecting all the rest.

One seems odd: Epson_SC-P900_700_Standard which shows as only being 72K in size. It isn't a true output (Matrix) profile, too small, doesn't have a perceptual table, soft proofing shows identical results with the four options (shouldn't); looks like a display profile. But again, all do show up for me. Aside from Standard, the other two are fine and behave as they should.

We have a vast selection of inkjet products at reduced prices. Many of the products we have listed are either end of line (discontinued), one-off special makings or could be past their original expiry date.

An ICC Profile is a digital file that instructs your printer on how much ink to lay down depending on which paper and ink you are using, giving more accurate colours, contrast and detail. A profile should be loaded into your print software (e.g. Photoshop) and used every time you print to ensure you achieve accurate results. You will need a different profile for every paper and printer you use.

Generic profiles are pre-made profiles that can be instantly downloaded and used straight away. These will be ideal for most users, but in some instances may not give the best results. This is when a Custom ICC Profile is recommended, which is bespoke to your own printer, ink and paper combination. We offer a free custom profiling service for all PermaJet inkjet paper.

Generic profiles are a great starting point, and for most people will provide completely satisfactory results. By having generic profiles available you are able to immediately start printing without having to wait for a custom profile to be made.

Since upgrading my M1 chip iMac to Ventura I cannot color match prints made when printing through Photoshop. The entire interface for the printer is setup differently. No matter how careful I am to select all the necessary options from paper type to icc profiles the print does not match prints made when I was running the previous OS. To check the issue, I have executed prints using my laptop (MacBook Pro running Big Sur) from the same files that do match the prints from iMac on the older operating system.

And there's catch to all of that. What you're looking at is not necessarily the same as the the OS thinks you're looking at. All it knows is there's a monitor profile, and the working color is converted into that space. It doesn't automatically mean the monitor profile, in any way, represents what you're viewing.

Why is that? Because most people only use the canned profiles that come with the OS. Often, they choose an RGB profile that isn't even a monitor profile. But since the OS lets you choose it, it must be okay to do that, right?

No. Not even a little. The only existing profile you can choose that has anything at all to do with your monitor is the one pulled from the monitor, which is displayed above the line in the monitor settings. Such as here:

Why there are two in my list for the same monitor, I don't know. But I don't use them. Not even when a monitor is brand new. The supplied, default profiles are only good for a few months, at best. After that, the monitor will have drifted far enough away from the default that it's no longer useful.

Here's something most people also don't know. Apple plays with ColorSync's internal workings with every - single - major - OS - release. Every one. It doesn't matter if you haven't changed your monitor profile. It will no longer be used or translated by ColorSync the same as before. With every major release, I recreate my monitor profile, and all printer profiles.

The only good way around this mess is to use a true monitor profiling system so the resulting profile is based on actual readings of the monitor's output. Anything you do with the built-in Calibrate function is strictly a guess. And not even a good one.

2 - Create and log into a new, basic, admin user account, Set up users, guests, and groups on Mac,  and print from there in Photos. This tells us if the problem is limited to your user account or is system wide.

Hello, I have also an issue with colors not being properly printed on my Epson P900. I have two Ventura 13.5 Macs, one Mac Studio with M1 chip and one MacBook Pro with Intel. I have the same versions of everything on both and Epson 12.65 driver. Intel Mac prints fine but the colors fail on M1 Mac. What more - the ugly AirPrint Driver 3.0 is printing images correctly on both (but is not useful for me). So, it seems to be some strange interference between M1 - Ventura - Epson 12.65 driver. Not easy to find a culprit... Has anyone encountered this issue? Any feedback is appreciated.

While the OS will usually recognize and set up drivers for the printers it finds on its own, these are almost always very basic, incomplete drivers. You'll want to install those from Epson in order to have all control options available.

My reasoning is that, as I said earlier, I then used the MacBook Pro laptop (running an older Os) execute the print command and it perfectly matched the original print. The only variable that I can determine that is different is the Ventura OS.

Check the Photoshop settings on each machine and make sure they are using the same color profile. I had PS a number of years ago and vaguely remember it would let me pick the profile to use when opening an image. Just make sure , if that feature is available, that both apps are using the same profile.

The Apple M1 drivers 3.0 was my problem. Changing out for EPSON DRIVERS resolved this instantly for my P800 and now with my P900 I have no issues . Also I don't have WiFi connection enabled only the USB. 152ee80cbc

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