Epson ET-4700 Users Guide - Page 260
Back of Original Image Appears in Scanned Image, Ripple Patterns Appear in an Image
View all Epson ET-4700 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 260 highlights
Parent topic: Solving Scanned Image Quality Problems Related references Additional Scanning Settings - Main Settings Tab Additional Scanning Settings - Advanced Settings Tab Back of Original Image Appears in Scanned Image If an image from the back of a thin original appears in your scanned image, try these solutions: • Place a piece of black paper on the back of the original and scan it again. • Adjust these Epson Scan 2 settings (if available) and try scanning again: • Select the Advanced Settings tab and adjust the Brightness setting. • If the Image Type is set to Black & White, select Text Enhancement. If the Image Type is set to Color or Grayscale, change the Text Enhancement setting to High. Parent topic: Solving Scanned Image Quality Problems Ripple Patterns Appear in an Image You may see a ripple pattern (called a moiré) in scanned images of printed documents. This is caused by interference from differing pitches in the scanner's screen and your original's halftone screen. To reduce this effect, adjust these Epson Scan 2 settings (if available) and try scanning again: • Select the Descreening setting. • Select a lower Resolution setting. • Place the original at a slightly different angle. Parent topic: Solving Scanned Image Quality Problems Related references Additional Scanning Settings - Main Settings Tab Additional Scanning Settings - Advanced Settings Tab Scanned Image Colors Do Not Match Original Colors Printed colors can never exactly match the colors on your computer monitor because printers and monitors use different color systems: monitors use RGB (red, green, and blue) and printers typically use CMYK (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black). Check the color matching and color management capabilities of your computer, display adapter, and the software you are using to see if they are affecting the palette of colors you see on your screen. 260