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Posts Tagged ‘Lab’

What if you want to export layered PSDs so that you can edit them before sending them for Print-Ready service? Easy.

Just select QBY Print-Ready Service as your Lab Settings in Remix. This will allow you to save the files as PSDs that you can edit to your heart’s content. (Just don’t change image sizes, cropping, file names or specifications.)

Remember to flatten the layouts to JPEGs before you use the Order Wizard, as PSDs are not valid for Print-Ready service and there’d be an extra charge to flatten the files.

print-ready-warning

If you use our Print-Ready service as well as ordering Digital Copies from MATTED albums, it’s a little more complicated. We need layered files to create the copies, so you will need to leave your files as PSDs. When you export you’ll get the warning message above. Just click Yes to continue.

HTH, Ian

 

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  • img_0169

    Rodney Ellmore, a good friend and long time Queensberry client, enjoyed a distinguished 46-year career.

    Over lunch recently I asked him about the shift from black-and-white to colour photography that transformed the portrait and wedding industry. Profitable careers were built on strong partnerships between a generation of photographers and their vendors.

    I believe there are lessons here for our own tumultuous times.

    Click here to download the mp3 file (6.5 mins).

    Cheers, Ian

    PS How did Rod “keep us honest”? If we were ever unsure of something, we’d ask ourselves, “Is it good enough for Rod?” Every business needs such good-humoured, supportive, demanding clients. And to listen to them.

    I shot the picture on my iPhone. Rod says he likes the back-lighting but I’m sure he’s being kind.

     

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  • dsc00014new

    In many labs these days the only people who look at your prints are the Dispatch team. Strange as it seems, that makes sense – it’s your files they’re printing, and something has to give if you want low prices.

    But it doesn’t make sense at Queensberry. We critique everything we print, including Print-Ready. The difference is we see the image files with Full Colour Service (because it’s our job to colour correct them) whereas we don’t see Print-Ready work until it’s printed.

    But why review Print-Ready work at all? Print-Ready means you edit your images yourself, and we don’t modify them. We just print what we’re given, right?

    It’s not that simple.

    We can’t afford to put a client’s prints into an expensive album, ship it to them and then have a debate about who’s to blame for the printing.

    It’s not just about print quality either. We need to check for other things that can spoil an album, such as alignment, cropping and panorama problems. Otherwise we risk converting a few wasted prints into a major expense, with neither party wanting to wear the cost.

    All the issues I’ve mentioned are the photographer’s responsibility under Print-Ready, which is why we charge for any reprints necessary to fix them. (To save on cash and frustration, see our own checklist.)

    But equally important, we have our own standards to maintain. People are paying for the very best when they choose a Queensberry album. And many of our staff have spent a lifetime in this industry and deservedly hold their heads high. What should we do if they come to us and ask, “Is this OK to put in one of our albums?” It happens.

    That said, there’s no implicit “We’re right and they’re wrong” here. You might not like our colour correction policy, for example, or the characteristics of our equipment, and that’s OK. There’s no “blame” attached to differences of opinion or taste. And yes, we do get it wrong sometimes.

    But in a quality-focused organisation we can’t ask staff to compromise our own standards. And after all, their goal is the best possible outcome for your clients.

    Cheers, Ian

     

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  • Food for thought… Photographers do a huge amount more now than they used to in the old days – and it’s questionable whether they get paid for it.

    They used to “send their work to the lab”, now they ARE the lab.

    Colour management and colour correction used to be the lab’s problem, now they’re the photographer’s.

    My thought for the day – you can’t afford cheap printing for two reasons:

    - YOU do all the work – that’s why it’s cheap.

    - BECAUSE you do all the work you can’t do other, more profitable stuff (or just go home earlier in the evenings).

    Truth to tell, many photographers would also get a better result if they didn’t touch their files, just left the work to the lab. Think of it, higher quality in less time for the small price of a higher lab bill.

    Don’t tell your competitors, but that’s the point of Queensberry’s Full Colour Service. To tweak the old Pantene ad, it won’t work for everyone but it does work.

     

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  • This is an important message if you send us layered PSD files. If any of the layers have reduced opacity what you see on screen may NOT match the print – unless you check an obscure preference box in Photoshop’s Colour Settings. In this post we’ll tell you what to do about it, and why.

    colour-settings

    In Color Settings’ Advanced Controls you should CHECK the box, “Blend RGB Colors Using Gamma” (as in the graphic). Leave the value set to 1.00. This is considered ‘colorimetrically correct’ by Adobe and will match our settings in the Lab.

    This check box affects the way that RGB colours are blended and displayed in layered images. Because it manages the way two images intersect, it does not affect single images.

    Now, why. It’s important to understand that WHENEVER you send layered files to us, the Lab does the final blending (when it flattens the files for printing).

    The problem is that we have no way of knowing whether you have checked this box or not. If it’s not, Photoshop will use the system gamma (ie 2.2, or 1.8 on older Macs) and there may be an appreciable density difference between what you see and what you receive. If you flatten the images before uploading to us (as is normally the case with print-ready), what you see is what you’ll get, because the blending happens on your system.

    Hope this helps!

     

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  • Happy New year – we’re back!

    Well we’ve had the traditional Kiwi summer holiday – rested up, enjoyed the beach (and shopping!), spent time with friends and family. Now we’re back and ready to rock ‘n roll! We hope you managed to enjoy the holiday season too – we look forward to catching up in 2008.

    Best wishes from everyone at Queensberry

    qbybinderyc

    We shot this at the Bindery close-down BBQ – just in time – some of us had already disappeared to the shops! Nice of Santa to stop by and let his hair down.

    qbyprint

    The lab reckon Christmas isn’t Christmas without sun and a picnic.

     

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