Originally Posted by
GrumpyDiver
Chris - as a person who does a fair bit of printing of images, things are not as straight forward as they seem.
1. For a colour managed workflow, you will need a profiled computer screen and there are many devices on the market to do that. I use a rather ancient x-Rite i1 for my work.
2. While this process gets the colours right, it does not do the screen brightness to print brightness well at all. Here you need to do test prints to figure out how much to lighten your images before sending them off to the printer. As long as you do not touch your screen adjustments after profiling (especially the brightness), this adjustment will be consistent. I simply add a print adjustment layer to my image when I prepare it for printing (top layer) and output my image that way. It will look super light in most instances.
3. You will need to know the printer and paper that you will be using so that you can load those icc profiles into your computer for soft proofing.
4. Most printers default to sRGB colour space. A few will use AdobeRGB. Your image needs to be in the appropriate colour space for the prints to come out looking right.