![]() This is why I always drive home the point that you have to understand the limitations of soft proofing and always print to confirm. So basically either way (out of gamut for the printer or monitor), you have a problem. If some colors in your photo are out of gamut on the monitor, those colors cannot be emulated on the monitor and color will be inaccurate in those areas: they may print fine if they are in gamut on the printer but if they are out of gamut on your monitor, the soft proof itself won't represent what the print will look like. Remember that soft proofing is basically an editing tool: the goal is to allow you to see what your print will look like, but on your monitor. Should I care about the difference, or is it not worth worrying about? What if my printer is great but my monitor is a POS?
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