I'm using the Deskjet 960 printer driver, which is not a postscript driver. And no, I don't have a Postscript RIP (or not one that will run in anything close to OS X!!! I did have one for an Epson printer many moons ago, but was never able to get everything working properly, despite several long telephone conversations with very helpful Epson support people.
On reading the manual yet again, I realize that they really don't intend for you to use the Postscript Color Management for a
non-postscript printer, but oddly enough, so far, it's produced the best color! There is NO ICC profile for the HP Deskjet 960 that I can find - nothing shows up in the list of profiles in PS under "Print Space". And I've looked for third party profiles too with no luck. And yes, I KNOW this isn't a "pro" printer, but it's all I've got right now, so I want to make it do the best job it can. So, which option should I choose? I've read what I can, but everything assumes that you have a profile handy and I don't. I've even tried "same as source" (ie: don't color manage) and the results are still not correct. Skin tones are still too cool, compared to what I'm seeing on my monitor.
I've calibrated this monitor several times - I'm now trying Adobe RGB 1998, since the calibration for the Electron Blue 22 seems too cool and since the photo profile was not converted to this, this may be part of the problem - my profile and what I was actually seeing were not the same. As my son would say..."well, duh".
Later...I'm still a tad confused here, but finally seem to have found something that actually works!!!
Having now converted the profile for the photos to Adobe RGB 1998, calibrated the monitor to RGB 1998 (and renamed & saved it - slightly tweaked) and selected the same profile for the print space, finally, I'm getting exactly what I expect. I think the mistake may have been in the monitor calibration (and not changing the photo profile - using the embedded profile had me fooled - nothing I read on that subject was especially clear) Now, I'm using essentially the same profile as the camera spits out (sRBG, if I remember correctly, which fits within the Adobe RGB 1998 space) and all is right with the world. Still somewhat clueless about all of this, but hey...only about 10 prints and who knows how much ink later...something that resembles reality!
All of this will no doubt be phenomenally obvious to those of you with more PS 6/7 experience than me.
Most of my Photoshop work recently has been for the web - and I had only done a few prints on my HP since I got it, and none since upgrading PS. My old Epson 850 and whatever version of PS I was using two years ago had given me good results but I had never gotten to the point of fiddling with the HP for optimum results until now. With a two year backlog of digital photos and my lovely new toy (Canon Digital Rebel), I've got to start printing 'em out! I may also send some off to ofoto or whichever digital lab produces the nicest prints - anyone have any recommendations? Given the cost of HP ink, it may be the cheaper option for the "Grandma prints", and also the more permanent one, since HP's inks are not archival quality like the high-end Epson and Canon ones.