These days we are mostly jpeg ‘holiday snap’ photographers from which my lady makes albums. I am not usually entering competitions ... so you do not ‘see’ much of me! But I have great respect for the knowledge in CiC and have a perplexing issue I would like advice about ...
Prints come out too dark on our home printer but they match the prints (same ‘darkness’) returned from online printing companies. Print results from two web printers (based within Europe and highly rated) and the HP Envy Printer I use are identical.
We use OK camera's including Nikon, Panasonic plus a Nexus 5X phone. When viewed on their screens images are not dark. I have also viewed images on 3 separate Windows pc's (one Vista, one Windows 7 upgrade to 10 and one new out of the box windows 10) with the brightness set at about 70%. Again, all look OK but the print results are still too dark. Perhaps one could say a stronger ‘brown’ tint making the prints look darker? I have printed direct from the Nexus phone to home printer ... same result.
We have been using most of our digital equipment for some years and this never used to occur from home or web printers until maybe 12-18 months ago ... what we saw was what we got. No changes have been made to our gear. I can of course lighten/adjust the images but is this necessary using OK camera gear ...mostly the same gear that used to give acceptable prints from a home printer or from the web on-line printer. As an example, for some years we took photos with a Nikon D4800, uploaded to a Vista pc, reduced file size using PSE and then uploaded to a web printer. The returned prints were what we would expect ... they closely matched what we uploaded. The print results today using this very same gear are ‘dark’.
I really am at a loss to understand, given that no device changes have been made that should impact on printing. The more I search the web the more users I find who experience similar issues and the primary comment is that ‘their screens are set too bright’. I do understand backlighting verses print output and take reasonable care of this with a 70% backlight when viewing images.
Given that we have tried multiple devices, all with the same result and given that digital images to print were totally acceptable some 18 - 24 months ago (WYSIWYG), something in the compatibility between sRGB and the printing CMYK colour space could have changed? This is unlikely.To brightness correct most images that we print should be unnecessary ... it would suggest that all our devices (if used, say, on auto for general snaps) can not deliver a well adjusted image. Again this is unlikely.
Hope this all makes sense! What to do?