Okay, I’m frustrated. I ran out of ink on my epson r2400, specifically light light black and light magenta. I changed cartridges and now the color is off. I haven’t changed the profiles or settings and the image is the same (I was printing multiple copies of the same image when I ran out of ink). The prints are much more magenta now . The inks are epson inks, the paper is Costco paper, the profile I got directly from Costco. I ran a nozzle check, and it was fine. The combination worked very well until I ran out of ink.
I contacted Epson, to see if they could explain it or if they ever have ink inconsistencies. They assured me that their ink quality is perfectly consistent. Therefore, they said, the problem must be with the paper or my settings in Photoshop.
Has anyone experienced a color shift simply from changing cartridges before? Any suggestions on what might have happened within Photoshop to cause such a problem? Any suggestions at all?
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– Taking the inks out one by one, giving each one a gentle side-to-side shake 5 times or so, then putting them back in. See if that makes any difference.
– If that doesn’t work, try doing a head cleaning, even if a nozzle check looks ok.
check your print utility setting again (don’t use Saved settings they corrupt)
FILE> PRINT
Printer: Be sure your 2400 is selected Document (be sure it is selected, not proof) Color Handling: Photoshop manages Color Printer Profile: SPECIFIC profile for your Costco paper Rendering Intent: Relative Colorimetric Black Point checked
PRINT
Print Settings
Media Type (select the surface type closest to your paper (glossy, luster, matte…) Mode: Advanced> Print Quality
I did try them all, shaking, cleaning, resetting. All to no avail. I’m going to head out and buy another light magenta and change it out to see if that makes a difference. . . .
I’ve never seen color shift as you describe just from changing a printer cartridge on my R2400. (I use genuine Epson carts.)
But if you haven’t used the printer in a couple of weeks or so, or if it is in the sun, or if the humidity is low, you may have to do a head cleaning; perhaps a few times, until the test patterns run consistently, with no breaks.
Also, check the expiration dates for your ink carts. They are displayed in the Epson print utility and are printed on the blue-and-white Epson boxes. And keep you spare cartridges sealed in their boxes in a cool, dry place until needed.
Thanks for the latest tips, though the problem has been solved!!
I ran through the light magenta cartridge in question making a lot of color prints where the match wasn’t critical. I replaced the cartridge with another epson light magenta and printed the same photo that initially caused my concern. Amazingly it is back to where it belongs, identical to the prints I printed before I made the last cartridge change.
Therefore, in my opinion, the cartridge was indeed the culprit. Surprising yes, disappointing yes, rare yes, but it really, truly did happen.
I’ve always been a fan of epson, but it sure is infuriating when a manufacturer places the blame on someone else and refuses to even consider that the fault could possibly be in their own quality control.
Though I will most likely stick with epson when I eventually search for another printer, I may now entertain other brands. Any suggestions?
All purchased in 2009 at the local office max . . . .didn’t save the box and I can’t decipher the code stamped on the cartridge so I don’t know the age. I would assume they go through a fair bit as they are the only local supplier that carries 2400 ink.
I wouldn’t assume. I don’t think any of us has never inadvertently picked up expired food, even in heavily trafficked supermarkets. Your ink supplier may not have rotated his stock properly.
If swapping a (genuine Epson) cartridge for another of the same type works, the cartridge could be old or have a defective chip, or there could have been nozzle clogging. The Epson Printer Utility, will tell you cartridge dates. Similarly, dates are stamped lightly on every Epson ink cartridge box.
Give your photos a professional finish with sharpening in Photoshop. Learn to enhance details, create contrast, and prepare your images for print, web, and social media.
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