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tell me about original templates

The capture or scanning Method with relevant image enhancement settings are grouped together in a 'Type of original' template to give best results with the kind of input document to which it refers. Your selection of Color or B&W copying determines which Methods and enhancement adjustments are relevant to the template.

For most copy assignments, the HP Designjet scanner software contains standard Type of original templates with optimal default settings. For example, a brochure is typically a mix of photos and text while maps are line-oriented.

For a description of the templates available select...

...templates for color copying

...templates for black and white copying

...tell me about original template settings

To make small adjustments to a standard Type of original template or to define one of your own, see:

...how do I define an original template?

templates for color copying

Template

Application

Color Photo

Photographs and posters

Brochure

Documents containing both photos and text

Map

Maps and graphics with a high level of detail

templates for black and white copying

Template

Application

Normal

Drawings, text, and documents that contain black and white together with graytones.

Blueprint

Blueprints: originals with distorted foregrounds and backgrounds. The shades that create image noise are close to the shades of the image's data and are hard to differentiate.

Sepia

Sepia originals with the same foreground/background distortions as described above for blueprint.

B&W Photo

Photographic images that contain many shades of gray.

tell me about original template settings
  • Method

The Method applies to the way the scanner captures and digitizes the image. The default Method settings for the built-in Type of original templates are optimal in relation to the kind of original in question and you shouldn't have to change them.

  • Lightness

This same setting can also be accessed directly from the Copy tab dialog. The default Lightness value is set to zero which works well with most documents. You can change this value to make the copy lighter (positive value) or darker (negative value) and compensate for dull or faded originals.

  • Saturation

Saturation indicates the intensity of a hue, or in other words the strength of a color. A high saturation makes a color's hue more intense than the same color with a low saturation value. A positive value increases saturation and a negative value decreases saturation.

  • Red, green, and blue

You can adjust your copy's color balance during image capture through separate controls for each of the three color-channels Red, Green, and Blue. Adding and subtracting an amount of a color affects the whole color balance. Often it's best to keep the three channels on the same levels. Experiment with the different effects through previewing.

Select negative values to reduce the total content of the color and select positive values to increase the total content of the color.

  • Black enhance and background clean

The black enhance option is used to change dark graytone colors to true black.

For example, if you are copying a brochure with a mixture of text and pictures, the text will often be digitized to a color that we may see as black but really is a dark graytone. When the printer digests this graytone data, it will print the original's text with a halftone pattern, meaning scattered dots instead of solid black.

By increasing the black enhance value, you can get the text to be copied in real black and it will therefore appear clearer.

Use the black enhance option with caution, because it can change other dark colors (not only grays) into black, making small dark spots appear in the picture.

Background clean is used if you have an original with a background that is not completely white. If you want your background to appear as pure white then you can increase the background clean value. As with black enhance, background clean should be used with caution, as it can also affect some of the other light colors.

Both black enhance and background clean function as "cutoff" values in which pixels under or over a certain value are affected by the setting. You define cutting points on a scale of low to high lightness measured in values from 0 to 255. The default value of both options is zero (no effect).

Example:

You have copied an original and want to improve it by making the text blacker and the background whiter:

  1. Adjust the black enhance value upwards from its default of zero (to 25, for example) and thus make pixels with low lightness values go to black.
  1. Adjust the background clean value upwards from its default of zero (to 25, for example) and thus make the pixels at high lightness levels go to white.

You can give your copy sharper lines with the Sharpen option. The Sharpen feature identifies edges in the image and intensifies them.

  • Sharpen/Blur

The Blur feature blends colors and thus removes unwanted "noise" during image capture. Many images are created with dithering, which is used for representing different colors in the original, and this dithering often creates unnecessary "noise" in the image. Blurring smoothes out unwanted transitions between colors. With Black and White copying the Blur feature smoothes out gray dither by removing unwanted sharp transitions between excessive shades of gray.

Don't think of blurring as the opposite of sharpening. Sharpening works on the image's edges only while blurring looks at whole color or graytone areas and smoothes them out.

TIP: Using Sharpen together with the Blur feature can often enhance image quality by first blurring away noise in the image and then sharpening the result.

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