

I saved each color as a layer and the file as a PSD so I can alter it if needed later. I used some Epson Hot Bright White (17x22 inches) as the matte paper although I printed it with the PK black inks and not the matte black as the Cone HD-PK black ink was being used. I did all of them with about a 1/2" separation between the squares and mounted it.

Just set it for a 3" square using Adobe RGB and maybe 300 dpi" an fill that square and place it on a black 17x22 image. Under "Manufacturer's sRGB D65 color values" you see the numbers to fill in Photoshop for each color description. If one Googles "Colorchecker Wiki" you'll find a table with the colors and their hex number values here: So I decided since my printers are calibrated using the i1 PhotoPro 2 and BasICColor software, "Why not make my own chart in Photoshop?" Might try a 17x22 inch print in the Epson 3880 using the Cone pigments and their new HD-Black. Could be handy at some sites too with landscapes and the wide angle DSLR lenses. The x-rite or Macbeth Colorchecker chart is just too small to capture in post editing work so I needed a larger one. I ran into a small problem with a drone and the wide angle lenses they use on them with regards to color in editing.
