During last Tuesday’s program, our speaker, Sarah Seeser with Fracture, said she would share a couple of videos about Fracture in case anyone was interested in learning more.
Here are the links:
In addition, Sarah consulted with a Customer Support Teammate and sent the following response to a question asked by Dianne Binnie.
- Question: “Different paper requires different icc profiles for printing. I have to use color management when editing to determine if the colors are what I intend. Since this is printed directly on glass, I am wondering how I would check that in adobe color management when processing my image?”
- Fracture’s response: “Pinning down how colors will turn out on glass is a tricky art. There’s no exact set of guidelines for adjusting color; glass is one medium that’s very difficult to color profile like normal non-transparent materials (i.e. paper), so there’s no specific color profile that’s 100% accurate across the board. Typically, we’re unable to print neons or metallics. All files should be profiled with RGB for the best output. I usually err on the side of having more contrast, especially around finer details- Fracture prints will typically print lighter where there are a lot of highlights. If you’d like to tweak an image before uploading, I’d suggest heightening contrast in areas with a lot of details and increasing saturation in areas lit by strong lighting (especially on faces). As for color, keep in mind that vivid, deeper colors are preferable for subjects since they come out more clearly defined.”
I hope this helps your group. If anyone has other detailed questions or would like more information about this answer, they can contact our support team directly via support@fractureme.com.
Sarah Seeser, Executive Business Partner
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