Fiery Command Workstation 5.8
Fiery Command Workstation 5.8
© 2016 Electronics For Imaging, Inc. The information in this publication is covered under Legal Notices for this
product.
11 January 2016
Fiery Command WorkStation 3
Contents
Contents
Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Fiery Command WorkStation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
The Fiery Command WorkStation workspace . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Job Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Device Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Viewing jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Fiery Preview in Fiery Command WorkStation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
View information for processed jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Fiery Command WorkStation 5
Contents
Printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Import jobs for printing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Import a job into the Print queue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Import jobs from external Fiery Server archives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Setting print options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
View job properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
Job actions in the Job Properties window . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Print option categories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Fiery Impose templates in Job Properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Preset print settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Server Presets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Remove raster data from a job . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Printing methods . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Use Tray Alignment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Sample Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Proof Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Sequential Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Set up Sequential Print . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Set Sequential Print options in Configure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Use Quick Doc Merge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Managing jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Search for jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Search for jobs using filtered-view tabs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Filter a job list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Export a job list . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Move jobs to another queue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Reorder jobs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Fiery Command WorkStation 6
Contents
Fiery Dashboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Create an EFI Passport account (free) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Sign on to Fiery Dashboard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
Fiery Dashboard data collection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Authorize data collection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Cancel authorization for data collection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Managing color . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Color print options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
View or edit default color settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .106
View profile properties . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Compare profile gamuts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107
Import or export profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107
Create or delete profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Edit profile settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .109
Edit profile content . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .110
Print a test page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Adjust the gray balance of a profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
Fiery Command WorkStation 7
Contents
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .237
Fiery Command WorkStation 12
Contents
Fiery Command WorkStation 13
Overview
Overview
Fiery Command WorkStation is the print job management interface for Fiery Servers.
With Fiery Command WorkStation, you can connect to multiple Fiery Servers and then manage jobs from a single
location. The intuitive interface makes complex tasks simple for operators and administrators, regardless of the
number or types of jobs you process.
Job Center and Device Center are integrated features of Fiery Command WorkStation that include tools to search
for jobs, preview jobs, assign workflows, and manage digital and offset print jobs. You can use Fiery Command
WorkStation tools to do the following tasks:
Fiery Central
Fiery Central software integrates your production systems to make existing or new copiers/printers more scalable
and productive. It combines multiple Fiery Driven digital printers, and other select copiers/printers, into a
centralized print production system that you can access through Fiery Command WorkStation.
Fiery Command WorkStation 14
Overview
• Main menus - Access commands through these menus (see Commands for managing jobs in a queue on page
14).
• Job Center - Use to view and manage jobs sent to the connected Fiery Server. Job Center includes the Printing
and Processing queues.
• Device Center - Use to configure the connected Fiery Server and access various print management tools.
• Servers - Use to connect and disconnect Fiery Servers, and to view status and error messages and consumables.
• Job Summary - View the page content (thumbnails) of a processed job. From the Job Summary pane, you can
open Preview to see information about spooled, unprocessed jobs, and jobs with and without raster data.
Job Center
The Fiery Command WorkStation Job Center is a centralized location where you can view and manage jobs sent to
the connected Fiery Server. Job Center includes the Printing and Processing queues and the Held, Printed, and
Archive lists.
You can use Job Center to do the following:
• Search for jobs, view job properties, and preview jobs across all Fiery Servers. A customizable tool bar allows
users to see detailed information about their jobs.
• Assign workflows and manage jobs
• Group jobs for efficient job management and visibility of job status
• View the status of all Fiery Servers
• View information on copier/printer, consumables and media, and job requirements
You can access commands for a job that is displayed in the Held, Printed, or Archived queues in Job Center. Right-
click on a job in a queue to display the list of commands or select one from the Actions menu.
Optional features are displayed only if they are supported by the connected Fiery Server.
Apply Workflow Displays a list of server presets and virtual printers which can be applied to
the selected job.
Cancel Cancels the selected jobs. Only applicable to jobs that are still showing in
the Printing or Processing queues.
Fiery Command WorkStation 15
Overview
Color Verification (option) Opens the Color Verification Assistant, part of the Fiery Color Profiler
Suite.
Compose (option) Opens Fiery Compose (if supported), where you can define the chapter
divisions of a job, print ranges of pages on varying types of media, insert
blank media between pages, and insert tab media containing text labels (if
the printer supports tab printing).
Image Enhance Visual Editor Opens Image Enhance Visual Editor (IEVE), an image enhancing application
(option) that provides a visual workspace for adjusting individual images in PDF or
PostScript jobs submitted to Fiery Servers (including jobs submitted
through Fiery JDF workflows).
ImageViewer Opens ImageViewer (if supported) displaying the first page of a single job
(displays the first selected job if multiple jobs are selected). For more
information, see ImageViewer on page 196.
Impose (option) Opens Fiery Impose, which applies imposition layouts to jobs for custom
printing, binding, and trimming. Fiery Impose also applies impositions to
variable data jobs and saves imposed jobs as PDF files.
JobMaster (option) Opens Fiery JobMaster, which provides advanced PDF-based job
preparation tools for scanning, tab creation and insertion, page numbering,
chapter creation, and late stage editing.
Merge Jobs Creates merged jobs in the Held list. For more information, see Use Quick
Doc Merge on page 83.
Move Up/Move Down Reorders the selected jobs. Only applicable to jobs that are still showing in
the Printing or Processing queues.
Preflight Opens the Preflight Settings dialog box with a single selected job displayed
(displays the first selected job if multiple jobs are selected) and checks most
the common areas of output error to ensure that files print successfully. For
more information, see Preflight on page 195.
Preflight and Hold Performs the actions described for the Preflight command, then imports the
files to the Held list.
Preview Opens the Preview dialog box, where you can view thumbnail images of
pages in the job.
Print and Hold If a selected job is processed, sends the job to the Printing queue. If a
selected job is not processed, sends the job to the Processing queue. After
the job prints, a raster of the job is kept when it is returned to the Held list.
Fiery Command WorkStation 16
Overview
Print Next Sends a selected job to the top of the Printing queue without interrupting
the job that is currently printing. Has the same result as dragging the job to
the top of the Printing queue.
Process and Hold Sends a selected job from the Held, Printed, or Archived lists to the
Processing queue.
Process Next Sends a selected job to top of the Processing queue without interrupting the
job that is currently printing. Has the same result as dragging the job to the
top of the Processing queue.
Proof Print Prints a proof (a copy) of a selected job without changing the job's original
copy count. For more information, see Proof Print on page 80.
Properties Opens the Job Properties window, which displays information about a
selected job. If multiple jobs are selected, properties that are not shared by
the selected jobs are blank.
Remove Raster Removes the raster of a selected job from the Held or Archived lists.
Rush Print Sends a selected job to the top of the Printing queue and immediately prints
the job, interrupting the job that is currently printing.
Send To Moves a job to the queue of another Fiery Server. The destination Fiery
Server must be connected to Fiery Command WorkStation, otherwise it is
not displayed in the Send To list.
View Preflight Report Opens the Preflight Report dialog box. For more information, see Preflight
on page 195.
Device Center
The Fiery Command WorkStation shows system information in a single workspace. You can use the Device Center
to configure the connected Fiery Server and access various print management tools. You can integrate server setup
functions, set user privileges, and set up queues and job logs.
You can use Device Center to do the following tasks:
• View information about the connected Fiery Server, including information about consumables on the associated
printer.
• View and modify a diagram of your color workflow
• View and modify Paper Catalog, variable data printing (VDP), color profile, spot color, and font settings
• View available virtual printers and server presets, and automate image correction with Image Enhance settings
• View and compare user privileges as assigned by your administrator
• View a detailed log of all processed and printed jobs
Fiery Command WorkStation 17
Overview
• General - View information about the connected Fiery Server, including the IP address, capacity (amount of hard
disk drive space available), and a list of installed options and packages. The General tab includes the following
tabs: General Info, Server Configuration, and Tools.
• Color Setup - View and modify a diagram of your color workflow. The Color Setup tab includes the Color
Management tab and may include the Control Bar, Trapping, Progressives, and Halftone Simulation tabs if these
features are supported by the connected Fiery Server.
• Resources - View and modify Paper Catalog, variable data printing (VDP), color profiles, spot colors, and font
settings. The Resources tab includes the VDP Resources, Profiles, and Fonts tabs and may include the Paper
Catalog and Spot Colors tabs if these features are supported by the connected Fiery Server).
• Workflows - View a list of available virtual printers and server presets, and automate the correction of images
with Image Enhance settings. The Workflows tab includes the following tabs: Job Presets, Virtual Printers, and
Image Enhance.
• Users - View and compare user privileges as assigned by your Administrator. The Users tab includes the Users &
Groups tab, Compare Rights tab, and the Configure button. With Configure, you can modify user and group
privileges.
• Logs - View a detailed log of all processed and printed jobs. The Logs tab includes the Job Log tab.
Fiery Command WorkStation 18
Adding and connecting a Fiery Server
Access levels
You can log on as Administrator, Operator, or Guest. Administrators can set passwords for each type of user.
• Administrator - Has full access to all Fiery Command WorkStation and Fiery Server control panel functions. An
Administrator password is required.
• Operator - Has access to all Job Center functions. In Device Center, an Operator does not have access to
Configure, Backup and Restore, changing passwords, and deleting the Job Log. An Operator can view Paper
Catalog, virtual printers, and color management functions, but cannot edit them. An Operator password is
required.
• Guest - Can download, view job status, edit preferences, change layouts, but cannot access the Job Log, or make
changes to Fiery Server Setup. No password is required.
For more information about setting access levels, see Configure Help and Configuration and Setup, which is part of
the user documentation set.
• To add a Fiery Server, click Server > Connect New or click the green plus sign in the Servers list. Type the IP
address or DNS name for the Fiery Server in the Connect to a server field, and then click the plus sign icon to
add it to the list of servers. Then click Connect.
To search for an available Fiery Server, click the Search icon.
• To connect to a new Fiery Server, click Server > Connect New. In the Connect to a server field, type the IP
address or DNS name of the Fiery Server and click Connect.
To find a Fiery Server by name or IP address, look in the Disconnected servers list in the Connect to Server
window. If not, you can click the Search icon.
• To reconnect to a Fiery Server select it and click Server > Connect (or click the Connect icon).
You can also reconnect by double-clicking on the Fiery Server.
2 Select Administrator, Operator, or Guest from the User list, and type the appropriate password.
You do not need to type a password when logging in as Guest.
Note: In addition to the three default user names of Administrator, Operator, and Guest, users can login with
their own user names if the network administrator has set them as a member of one of the groups in Configure >
User Accounts.
3 Click Login.
2 In the Connect to Server dialog box, click the Search icon (magnifying glass) to open the Search window.
• To automatically search for all Fiery Servers within the subnet to which the local computer belongs, select
Auto Search.
• To search for Fiery Servers within a specific subnet range, select Subnet.
• Enter the subnet address to indicate the subnet range to include. Enter 0 in the octets where any number is
acceptable. For example, 10.100.10.0 will find 10.100.10.1 through 10.100.10.255.
• Enter the subnet mask to indicate any subnet ranges to exclude. Enter 0 in the octets where nothing is
excluded. For example, 255.255.255.0 will exclude everything but the indicated subnet address in the first
three octets, and will allow anything in the fourth octet (such as 10.100.10.30).
Fiery Command WorkStation 20
Adding and connecting a Fiery Server
• To search for Fiery Servers within a specific IP address range, select IP Range.
• Enter the start of the IP address range in From IP. To include the beginning of an octet, enter 0. For example,
10.100.10.0.
• Enter the end of the IP address range in To IP. To include through the end of an octet, enter 255. For
example, 10.100.10.255.
4 Click Go.
Any available Fiery Server that matches the search criteria is shown. You can filter the search result list by typing
a keyword into the Filter by keyword field.
5 Select the Fiery Server from the results list and click Add to add it to the Servers list.
• Click the minus sign icon to disconnect and remove the Fiery Server from the Servers list.
• Click the disconnect icon located to the right of the minus sign icon.
• Right-click the Fiery Server and choose Disconnect or Remove from List.
4 Click Login.
• Click Server > Switch to, and then choose another Fiery Server from the submenu.
• Click another Fiery Server in the Servers list to switch views from one connected Fiery Server to another.
Fiery Command WorkStation 21
Adding and connecting a Fiery Server
Status icons
The following status icons appear in the Servers list :
Adds a new Fiery Server and opens the Connect to Server window.
Disconnects and removes the Fiery Server from the Servers list.
Indicates that the Fiery Server has encountered an error either processing or printing.
Indicates that the Fiery Server is not connected to Fiery Command WorkStation.
Consumables
Consumables are limited resources such as paper, toner or ink, and staples that are used (or "consumed") by the
printer to print jobs.
Information about consumables is available in:
• The Servers list, in the Consumables section immediately below the name of the Fiery Server. Click the arrow to
expand the section, if needed.
• Device Center > General > General Info > Consumables.
The Consumables section in both the Servers list and Device Center includes information about available paper
trays, paper levels, and current toner or ink levels. From Device Center, you can also find additional information
about waste toner, fuser oil, and staples. To view information about a tray, you can:
Server information
The Server Information tab, which is the second tab located in the lower-left corner, provides a snapshot of
information for the selected Fiery Server.
The tab displays general information, such as the RAM allocated to the Fiery Server system software and hard disk
usage for different kinds of jobs.
To view a detailed and complete list of information, choose Device Center > General > General Info.
The Servers list provides information about the status of the Fiery Server and error messages about on the printer.
Status messages
Status messages may be about the Fiery Server or printer. The messages are as follows:
Warming Up Printer is warming up after waking from sleep or low power mode.
Toner Near Empty The specified toner is almost empty. Time to order new toner.
Error messages
Error messages are very important messages about issues that impact both the Fiery Server and the printer and
prevent jobs from printing (for example, a paper jam). If multiple errors occur simultaneously, the most critical error
appears first. After the first error is resolved, the next error appears.
The following are examples of error messages that may appear:
• Suspend on Mismatch
• Cancel on Mismatch
Suspend on Mismatch jobs remain in the Print queue for an interval of time ("the timeout period") defined in Setup.
During this time, a mismatch error message and a timer appear. The timer indicates how much time you have to
correct the error before the job is released from the Print queue and canceled. To avoid automatic cancellation of the
job, you must load the correct paper in the paper tray before the timeout period ends. Meanwhile, the next job
prints. If that job prints before the timeout period ends, the Suspend on Mismatch job is resubmitted to the Print
queue.
For more information about processing jobs with missing media, see Configure Help.
Fiery Command WorkStation 24
Customizing Fiery Command WorkStation
You can set preferences globally for Fiery Command WorkStation—for example, to control application settings such
as animated graphics, or to define the paths to temporary folders.
1 Do one of the following to open the Preferences dialog box:
• Automatically connect to servers from previous session - Applies only to users with saved passwords. When
selected, instructs Fiery Command WorkStation to automatically connect to each Fiery Server that you
connected to previously.
• Automatically check for updates - Opens the Fiery Software Manager to check for a more recent version of
Fiery Command WorkStation software and the Fiery applications online.
• Enable Cube Rotation - Turns on the display of cube rotation during transitions.
• Enable Animation - Turns on the display of animated graphics in the processing and printing bars for the
specified Fiery Server.
• Enable Tooltips - Turns on the display of pop-up text that describes Fiery Command WorkStation buttons and
options. When this option is selected, tips appear when you hold the mouse pointer over the button or option.
• Monitor Profile - Either displays the operating system setting for the monitor profile or allows you to select the
monitor profile for your primary monitor. The monitor profile is used by Color Editor and Paper Simulation.
The profile chosen during installation is the default. Click the Browse button to locate and import a new
monitor profile.
• Temporary Path - Specifies the folder where Fiery Command WorkStation temporarily stores copies of the jobs
you edit or change. To change the temporary path, click Browse and specify a folder.
• PS to PDF Conversion - Specifies the default Adobe PDF setting used when converting files to PDF for Impose/
Compose and Quick Doc Merge. Select Use server conversion, if supported to allow the Fiery Server to convert
the files on the server rather than on the user computer, and to select the PDF setting that you want to use.
Select Use default server settings to allow the Fiery Server to use its own default profile. Select Use selected job
options file to allow the user to browse and upload their own profile.
Fiery Command WorkStation 25
Customizing Fiery Command WorkStation
Server conversion is often faster than downloading the file to the client computer for conversion, and then re-
uploading it to the Fiery Server afterward. However, this option is not recommended in the following
scenarios:
• There are licensed fonts installed only on the user's computer, which are required for conversion.
• If a newer Adobe Acrobat version is available, the conversion must be done with the newer version to
support the new Acrobat features.
• The user wants to ensure that the Fiery Server resources are allocated for processing only, not for file
conversion.
• The user is connected to a previous version of the Fiery Server, which does not support server side
conversion.
• Imposition Template path - Specifies the folder where the Imposition templates are located for Fiery
Command WorkStation. To change the template folder path, click Browse and specify a folder.
• Scale - Specifies the default scale value used for imposed jobs. Choose Scale to Fit or 100%.
• Finish Size - Specifies the default finished size for imposed jobs based on Crop Box or user defined values. The
Based on Crop Box setting is the default and is dependent on the PDF crop box. The User Defined setting
allows Fiery Impose to detect trim box settings, when present within the document, and use them as the
default finished size.
• Application Language - Allows you to select the language you want Fiery Command WorkStation to display in.
By default, Fiery Command WorkStation uses the local operating system language, if the language is supported.
If the language is not supported, Fiery Command WorkStation uses English, or the language selected during
software installation (Windows only).
• Units - Specifies the units of measurement used to display attributes, such as page sizes and custom sizes, that
you enter in the Job Properties dialog box and in the Fiery Command WorkStation window. This setting does
not affect predefined page-size values.
Note: If Impose is installed and turned on, the Units setting also applies to the values entered manually in the
Imposition window.
• Cache Preferences - Select Enable caching to allow Fiery Command WorkStation to store information such as
thumbnails, locally, to allow for faster viewing of jobs on screen. Specify the folder to store the cached
information. Click Change Folder to browse to a new path location. Click Clear Cache to remove the stored
data from the folder specified. For Disk Space, use the sliding menu to specify the maximum disk space used
for caching.
• Click Reset to reset the default values. (The default values vary by Fiery Server.)
• Click OK to close the Preferences dialog box.
Fiery Command WorkStation 26
Customizing Fiery Command WorkStation
You can customize column headings for the Printing, Processing, Held, Printed, and Archived job windows. Change
the order of these columns or add/delete them to present information relevant to your particular print environment.
3 Select an item from the menu to add to or remove from the columns.
You can expand or collapse the Printing, Processing, Job Summary, and Servers list panes according to your
workstation's needs.
• From Job Center, double-click the Printing or Processing bar to expand or collapse the window.
• Click and hold the window grip ( ) on bottom of the window queue and drag it up or down to the new
location.
• Click View > Expand/Collapse Printing Queue or View > Expand/Collapse Processing Queue.
Fiery Command WorkStation 27
Customizing Fiery Command WorkStation
• Click the arrow icon ( ) on top of the window's title bar to move the window left or right to the new location.
• Click View > Expand/Collapse Job Info or View > Expand/Collapse Server List.
You can add toolbar icons to the Job Center toolbar. You can also restore the default toolbar icons, change the size of
icons, and display icons with or without text.
Some toolbar icons are available only if the Fiery Server supports them.
1 Right-click anywhere in the toolbar, and select Customize from the submenu that appears.
2 Add or remove toolbar icons by dragging to or from the toolbar. You can add the following toolbar icons:
New job Opens the Fiery Compose/Impose/JobMaster window, where you can create
a brand new print job.
Properties Opens the Job Properties window for the selected job.
Preview Opens the Preview window with the selected job displayed.
Start Sample Print Prints extra page(s) to an easily accessible output tray during a long print job
to verify that the copier/printer is performing as expected.
Note: Some tools are available only if the Fiery Server supports them.
Fiery Command WorkStation 29
Configuring Fiery Server settings
About Configure
Use Configure to set up the Fiery Server. Setup is required the first time the Fiery Server is turned on or after system
software is installed. You also use Configure to specify information about the network environment and printing
preferences for jobs that users send to the Fiery Server.
Java-based FS100/100Pro or If the Fiery system software is FS100/100Pro or earlier, the Fiery Server uses an
Configure earlier older version of Configure, which is Java-based and displays in an applet.
If you have trouble accessing this version of Configure from WebTools because of
Java, try accessing Configure from Command WorkStation instead.
To access the help for this version of Configure, in WebTools, click the Help icon on
the Configure tab.
HTML-based FS150/150Pro or If the Fiery system software is FS150/150Pro or later, the Fiery Server uses the latest
Configure (v3.0 later version of Configure, which is HTML-based and displays in an Internet browser.
or later)
To access the help for this version of Configure, click the Help icon in Configure or
go to help.efi.com.
4 Based on the version of system software, navigate to Help for that version of Configure (see the table above).
For information about how to access Configure, see Access Configure on page 31.
Fiery Command WorkStation 30
Configuring Fiery Server settings
This topic explains how to access Help for the different versions of Configure.
For information about setup options in Configure that are not discussed in this Help or Configure Help, see
Configuration and Setup, which is part of the user documentation set.
Note: Some Configure options may not be supported by your Fiery Server.
1 Open an Internet browser and type the IP address of the Fiery Server.
2 In WebTools, on the Configure tab, click the Help icon on the right side of the screen.
1 From Fiery Command WorkStation, connect to the desired Fiery Server and log in as Administrator.
The Server Configuration tab in Command WorkStation lists the current Fiery Server settings.
• Click the shortcuts on the left side of the page to view settings for a particular category.
• Click Configure in the bottom-right corner of the window to change current Fiery Server Setup options.
Fiery Command WorkStation 31
Configuring Fiery Server settings
5 Click Save.
• Click Print, select the printer to send your Server Configuration page to, and then click Define if you want to
specify different job properties for the print job from what is currently set as default on the Fiery Server. Click
Print again to print the page.
• Click File > Print > Server Configuration. A Server Configuration page is sent to the printer you are currently
connected to. The page prints with the default paper size and options of the Fiery Server.
Access Configure
After you start the Fiery Server for the first time, or install system software, you must set up the Fiery Server. If you
do not, default settings are used. Make sure that settings are appropriate for your printing environment. If your
network or printing environment changes, you may need to adjust your settings.
You can set up the Fiery Server from a client computer using Configure, which you can access from the following
locations:
1 From Fiery Command WorkStation, connect to the desired Fiery Server and log in as Administrator.
Note: If you are using a Fiery Server with the new version of Configure and a message about untrusted
connections appears, or you are asked whether you want to proceed, you can safely ignore the message and
proceed anyway. For more information about these messages, see Configuration and Setup.
Exit Configure
Some changes won't take effect until you reboot the Fiery Server. If a setting change requires a restart, reboot, or
other action, the banner at the top of the page will tell you. If you are making multiple setting changes that require a
reboot, you can wait to reboot until you have finished making all your setting changes.
• Do one of the following:
You can define privileges for the users who access the Fiery Server by assigning them to groups. Several groups are
provided by default, and you can create new groups. All users in a group have the same privileges.
You can view detailed information about users and groups from Command WorkStation > Device Center > Users.
In addition to assigning the users that you have created to a group, you can add users from your organization's global
address list. To do so, you must first enable LDAP services on the Fiery Server.
3 In the Fiery Contact List dialog box, click the Add User button.
4 In the Create User dialog box, specify the required information. Click Create.
5 Click Close.
Create groups
When you create a group, you define its privileges. You can add new or existing users to the group when you create
it, or you can create a group without adding users and then add them later.
To add users from your organization's global address list, you must first enable LDAP services on the Fiery Server in
Configure.
1 To restrict printing to only authorized users, from Configure, in Security > Printing Privileges set Allow printing
from to Authorized users.
• If All users is selected, anyone can print to the Fiery Server, regardless of whether you define that person as a
user, add users to a group, or assign privileges to the groups.
• If Authorized users is selected, only users in groups for which you have enabled printing privileges can print.
Also, users in the Guests group cannot print, unless you otherwise set printing privileges for the Guests
group. By default, the Guests group has no printing privileges.
Note: If your printer also offers a user authentication method, you may not be able to use both the printer and
the Fiery Server authentication methods simultaneously.
3 In the Add Group dialog box, enter a group name and a description.
Fiery Command WorkStation 34
Configuring Fiery Server settings
• Calibration - Allows members of this group to calibrate the Fiery Server. For default groups, only
Administrator and Operator groups have this privilege. For user-created groups, users have this privilege.
• Create Server Presets - Allows members of this group to save a set of print options that users can select for
their job.
• Fiery Mailbox - Allows members of this group to have individual mailboxes for scanning.
• Manage Workflows - Allows members of this group to create, edit, and delete Server Presets and virtual
printers.
• Print in B&W - Restricts members to print only in black and white.
• Print in Color and B&W - Allows members to print in color and grayscale.
Note: If Allow printing from is set to Authorized users, the Fiery Server still allows jobs to be submitted without
authentication from Hot Folders.
6 In the Assign User dialog box, add or remove users from one of the following: the Fiery Contact List or Global
Address List.
• Fiery Contact List - Contains users that you have already created.
• Global Address List - LDAP must be configured and enabled. Contains names from your organization's
corporate database.
Groups created in Configure that share domain groups obtained from the corporate server via LDAP are updated
dynamically. This is useful because the Fiery Server automatically verifies changes (such as additional group
members) in the LDAP domain groups and updates the Fiery Server group.
4 Assign the user to groups as required, using any of the following approaches:
• To create a new user and assign them to a group, select Create New User & Assign from the drop-down list,
type the appropriate information in the Create User dialog box, then click Save.
• To assign an existing user account to a group, select Add from Contact List. In the Assign Users dialog, enter
the account name under Users of Fiery Contact List, and press return, or select the account if listed and click
Add Users.
• To assign a user from the Global Address List, select Add from Global Address List. If LDAP is configured and
enabled, this list contains names from your organization's corporate database. If the Configure LDAP Settings
button displays, click the button to configure the LDAP settings to work with Command WorkStation.
5 Click Close when you have finished adding user accounts to groups.
Note: You cannot remove the default users named "admin" or "operator."
3 Move the cursor over the name of the user you want to remove from the group.
Notice that the Edit and Delete icons display.
5 Alternatively, after step 2 on page 35, click the Assign User button and click Add from Contact List.
6 In the Assign User dialog box, select the check box for users that you want to remove and click Remove Users.
Fiery Command WorkStation 36
Configuring Fiery Server settings
4 Click the Edit icon. In the Edit User dialog box, edit user attributes and click Save.
3 Click the Edit icon. In the Edit Group dialog box, select or clear privileges and click Save.
• Calibration - Allows members of this group to calibrate the Fiery Server. For default groups, only
Administrator and Operator groups have this privilege. For user-created groups, users have this privilege.
• Create Server Presets - Allows members of this group to save a set of print options that users can select for
their job.
• Fiery Mailbox - Allows members of this group to have individual mailboxes.
• Manage Workflows - Allows members of this group to create, edit, and delete Server Presets and virtual
printers.
• Print in B&W - Restricts members to print only in black and white.
• Print in Color and B&W - Allows members to print in color and grayscale.
Fiery Command WorkStation 37
Configuring Fiery Server settings
Note: You cannot delete the default users named Administrator, Operator, or Guest, and you cannot delete the
Administrators, Operators, or Guests group.
Note: The Delete icon only displays if you are allowed to delete the user.
c) Click the Delete icon.
The user is deleted from the Fiery Server completely.
d) Click Close.
Note: The Delete icon only displays if you are allowed to delete the group.
b) Click the Delete icon.
When prompted for confirmation, click Yes. The group is deleted from the Fiery Server completely.
You can back up and restore several categories of settings (if your Fiery Server supports them).
• Scan settings (current scan templates and settings, if your Fiery Server supports this feature)
• Command WorkStation settings (includes user-created tab presets, local job presets, Command WorkStation
preferences, imposition templates)
Note: The Command WorkStation settings option is not available on all Fiery Servers. When supported, this
option is available only from Command WorkStation on the Fiery Server with an attached monitor, keyboard,
and mouse.
• FreeForm/VDP Resources (includes FreeForm masters and other VDP resources, such as PPML resources and
links)
• Paper Catalog (settings made in Paper Catalog but may not include tray associations)
• Virtual Printers (all user-created virtual printers and their settings)
• Server presets
• Fonts (user-installed fonts)
• Job Log (a list of processed jobs)
Note: We recommend that you save the backup file to a network server, not the Fiery Server itself. Otherwise,
when you reinstall system software, the backup file is deleted.
• Saved Backup and Restore settings can be used from both Configure and Command WorkStation.
• In the case of upgrading your Fiery Server to a new system software version, you can restore the backup file
created from the previous version. However, all new settings not available in the previous system software are set
to system default.
• Backup and Restore settings can be restored to another Fiery Server of the exact same model and version, but in
this case, settings such as Server Name, IP address and Network settings are reset to system defaults. This
prevents problems with both Fiery Servers co-existing on the same network.
Note: The Restore Fiery Settings and Restore Default Fiery Settings option are not available for every Fiery Server.
From Configure, you can choose which Fiery Server settings you want to back up.
1 From Configure, choose Fiery Server > Backup.
From Fiery Command WorkStation, you can choose which Fiery Server settings you want to back up.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery Server and do one of the following:
• Click Device Center > General > Tools > Backup & Restore.
• Select Server > Backup & Restore.
2 Click Backup.
4 In the dialog box that appears, select a location to save the file and specify a name for the backup file.
If you previously backed up Fiery Server settings, you can restore them from Configure.
1 From Configure, choose Fiery Server > Restore.
After you restore default settings from Configure, the Fiery Server must reboot to revert to them.
Note: The information in this topic applies only to the Integrated Fiery Server.
1 From Configure, choose Fiery Server > Restore Default Fiery Settings.
If you previously backed up Fiery Server settings, you can restore them from Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery Server and do one of the following:
• Click Device Center > General > Tools > Backup & Restore.
• Select Server > Backup & Restore.
2 Click Restore.
3 In the dialog box that appears, browse to the location of the configuration settings you want to restore and click
Open or select a recent backup.
Fiery Command WorkStation 40
Configuring Fiery Server settings
Fiery Central is a modular, Paper Catalog, PDF-based production workflow tool that provides efficient load-balanced
network printing to high-volume print environment.
Fiery Central delivers an automated workflow in the following ways:
• Automatic job routing, job splitting, load-balancing, and error recovery among groups of printers
• All Fiery Central standard features
Fiery Command WorkStation 42
Managing Fiery Central workflows
To connect to a Fiery Central Server from the network, you type the IP address or DNS name and then log in.
1 Click Server > Connect New to display the Connect to Server window.
2 Type the IP address or DNS name for the Fiery Central Server in the Connect to a server field, and then click the
plus sign icon to add it to the Servers pane or click Connect to open the Login window.
To find a Fiery Central Server by name or IP address, look in the Disconnected servers list in the Connect to
Server window. If not, you can click the Search icon.
3 Select Administrator, Operator, or Guest from the list, and type the appropriate password.
You do not need to type a password when logging in as Guest.
4 Click Login.
3 Click Login.
The Servers pane allows you to disconnect from a Fiery Central Server.
1 Select a Fiery Central Server from the Servers pane.
Fiery Command WorkStation 43
Managing Fiery Central workflows
• Click the minus sign icon to disconnect and remove the Fiery Central Server.
• Click the disconnect icon located to the right of the minus sign icon.
Generic PostScript printer or non-Fiery printer within the Fiery Central Server
Consumables
The Consumables section in the Servers pane includes information about consumables for a selected Fiery Server
within a printer group. You must be logged on to the Fiery Server to see its consumables.
Consumable information is not available for a Fiery Central Servers, printer groups, non-Fiery Servers, or generic
PostScript printers.
• Right-click a Fiery Server in a printer group in the Servers pane, and select Show only Central Jobs.
• Select a Fiery Server in a printer group in the Servers pane, and click View > Show only Central Jobs.
• Select a Fiery Server in a printer group in the Servers pane, and select Central Jobs from the list box in the
Held/Printed/Archived pane.
You can use a default set up Fiery Central toolbar icons, move icons in and out of the toolbar, and determine
whether toolbar icons are displayed with text.
1 Right-click anywhere in the toolbar, and select Customize from the menu that appears, or select Fiery Central Set
to use the default pre-arranged Fiery Central toolbar icons.
3 Specify how the toolbar icons should be shown by right-clicking the toolbar and choosing an option.
When the Fiery Server receives a Fiery Central job and displays it in the Fiery Command WorkStation Hold or Print
queue, Fiery Central column headings can provide useful information about the job.
• To display column headings for a Fiery Central job, right-click in the column heading bar and select Central Set.
The default Fiery Central set of headings is added. Click More to see additional Fiery Central categories.
Fiery Command WorkStation 45
Managing Fiery Central workflows
Note: You can create a maximum of 10 printer groups for each Fiery Central Server.
• Click Device Center > General > Tools and click Launch FC License Manager.
• Click Server > Central Tools > Manage Fiery Central License.
• Click Start > Programs > EFI > Fiery Central > Fiery Central License Manager.
2 To enter licensing information, enter the activation key code exactly as displayed on the Fiery Central License
Form included in your Fiery Central software package.
You can configure the Fiery Central Server from WebTools, from Configure, or from Device Center.
• Do one of the following:
• Right-click the Fiery Central Bar, select WebTools, and then select the Configure tab. (For information about
using WebTools Configure, click the Online Help icon in the WebTools Configure window.)
• In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Server > Configure.
• In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Device Center > General > Tools, and then click Configure in the lower-
right corner.
Note: This feature can only be accessed from Fiery Command WorkStation installed on the Fiery Central Server.
You can launch WebTools from the Fiery Central Bar at any time to update your server configuration to reflect
changes in your Fiery Central printing environment.
Fiery Command WorkStation 46
Managing Fiery Central workflows
JDF (Job Definition Format) technology is an XML-based open industry standard for job tickets. It simplifies the
information exchange among different graphic arts applications and systems.
Fiery JDF allows submission of JDF jobs to the Fiery Central Server from applications that allow creation of JDF
tickets. Use Configure to specify JDF settings and to view the Fiery JDF version, the JDF Device ID, and the JMF
URL.
4 Select Override JDF job with the above settings, if you want to override the settings specified in the JDF ticket.
5 Click Apply.
Fiery Central Manager allows you to create printer groups, add new printers, change printer group settings, and
configure VDP settings and DSF connection settings.
• Right-click the Fiery Central Bar and select Fiery Central Manager.
• Click Start > All Programs > EFI > Fiery Central > Fiery Central Manager.
• In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Device Center > General > Tools, and then click Launch Manage
Groups, or from Server > Central Tools, select Manage Groups.
Note: This feature can only be accessed from Fiery Command WorkStation installed on the Fiery Central Server.
To allow Fiery Central to print jobs to the printers, you must create a printer group.
Note: Before you configure printer groups, you must have the IP address or server DNS name for each printer you
want to use with Fiery Central. Make a note of any additional options installed with each printer.
When you create printer groups, keep in mind the capabilities of your printers, the types of printing you will be
doing, and if speed or custom printing is a priority.
1 In the Fiery Central Manager window, select the Printer Groups tab.
2 To add a printer group, click Add; to edit an existing printer group, select a group and click Edit.
3 Type a Group Name to identify the printer group, add a description (optional), and then click Next.
A Group Name can be up to 16 characters long. The name cannot include special characters, hyphens, spaces, or
underscores.
5 Select the server family and printer model from the Model list.
The Port Number field is filled in by default (631).
• Click Search.
• Click Auto Discovery to search for available Fiery Servers on the network. Auto Discovery searches only the
Fiery Central Server with its local TCP/IP subnet.
Note: Auto Discovery will not find non-Fiery printers or generic PostScript printers on the network. You have
to manually add them to the printer group by using their IP address or printer name.
7 In the Available Printers list, select a printer and click the arrow button to move it to the Selected Printers list.
8 In the Edit/Configure Printer window, confirm that the Printer Name is correct and unique.
9 Click Paper Catalog Map to set up the Paper Catalog or tray selection for the printer you are editing and
configuring.
The Paper Catalog Map feature is available only if the Fiery Server or non-Fiery printer supports it.
10 Verify that the Installable Options pane lists the options installed on the printer, and then click OK.
You can specify optional and printer-specific options such as staplers, stackers, and booklet finishers for
individual printers in a printer group. The Fiery Central Manager incorporates these additional features into
printer group PPD files for printing.
Note: When you add a Fiery Server to a printer group, the configurable options are selected by default. You
manually install printer-specific options for non-Fiery printers.
12 Click Next when you have added and configured all of the printers you have selected for the printer group.
Fiery Command WorkStation 48
Managing Fiery Central workflows
• Select the Load Balance option for balancing individual print jobs among the printers in the group. If you set
Load Balance to Preferred Printer, also select a printer from the printer group in the Preferred Printer field.
• Set the Use Printer Type default, and specify whether black-and-white or color printers are used exclusively for
jobs sent to this group.
• Set one of the Cover Sheet/Merge Options.
• Set the Maximum Number of Printers.
• Select Reroute on Error to send the remaining portion of a job to the Fastest Single Engine when an error
occurs at the destination printer. If you do not select this option, jobs wait in the destination printer's Print
queue until the error is cleared.
14 Click Next; then review the summary information for the printer group and click Save.
If you need to make changes, click Cancel to discard the current printer group and create a new one.
15 With the printer group selected in the Fiery Central Manager Printer Groups pane, select Make Printer Group
drivers available through WebTools if you want users to be able to download Fiery Central printer drivers
through an Internet browser.
If you are using a Windows or Mac OS X computer, select this option so that users can download the printer
driver files and associated printer files from the Web.
17 To save changes and create the printer group, click OK in the Fiery Central Manger dialog box.
You can specify the following Load Balance, Cover Sheet/Merge, and Reroute on Error options when you set up a
printer group.
Fastest Single Engine Prints the entire job to the fastest printer that meets the print specifications
of the job.
Preferred Printer Prints the entire job to the printer you specify.
Copy Split Sends multiple copies of a single document to different printers, based on
print specifications and the current print load on each printer. Copy Split
requires a minimum of two color printers or two black-and-white printers.
Long Job Split Splits a single copy of a document across different printers. Long Job Split
requires a minimum of two color printers or two black-and-white printers.
Color Split Splits all copies across two printers, with color content sent to the fastest
color printer in the group, and black-and-white content sent to the fastest
black-and-white printer in the group. Color Split requires a minimum of one
color and one black-and-white printer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 49
Managing Fiery Central workflows
Cover Sheet-Manual Merge Automatically generates covers sheets with information about each portion
of the job to aid in manual merging.
Bar Code-Offline Merge Automatically generates cover sheets containing bar codes for collation by
an offline merge finisher. This option is available only when Load Balance is
set to Color Split.
No Cover Sheet-Inline Merge Inserts preprinted pages from an inline insertion tray. This option is
available only if a black-and-white printer in the group has an insertion tray,
and if Load Balance is set to Color Split.
Job Time Out Specifies how long a job waits in the destination printer's Print queue when
an error occurs, before being rerouted.
Total Reroutes Specifies how many reroutes are allowed for a single job. When the
maximum is reached, the job waits in the Print queue of the last printer
until the error is cleared.
After you have a printer group set up, you can manage the group by adding or deleting printers from the group, or
view information about the printer group.
1 In the Fiery Central Manager window, select the Printer Groups tab to display printer groups.
• Click Edit to update the group, or View to see the summary information for the group.
• Click Delete to remove the selected printer group.
• Click Add to add a new group.
• Select Make Printer Group drivers available through WebTools if you would like users to be able to download
Fiery Central Manager printer drivers through an Internet browser.
Note: If you are using a Windows or Mac OS client, this option should be selected so users can download the
printer driver files and associated printer files from the Web.
• Select the printer queues you want to publish (selected by default).
3 Click OK to save changes and create the printer group.
Fiery Command WorkStation 50
Managing Fiery Central workflows
Note: Before restoring from a backup, you must delete all existing printer groups. You cannot merge backed up
printer groups with existing printer groups.
The following information is backed up:
You can back up printer group information, Paper Catalog, and Paper Catalog mapping by using a wizard.
1 Start the Backup tool using one of the following methods:
• Click Backup in the Printer Groups tab of the Fiery Central Manager.
• In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Device Center > General > Tools, click Launch Backup & Restore, and
then click Backup in Fiery Central Manager.
• From Server > Central Tools, select Manage Backup & Restore, and then click Backup in Fiery Central Manager.
2 Follow the instructions in the Backup & Restore wizard.
You can restore printer group information, Paper Catalog, and Paper Catalog mapping by using a wizard.
1 Start the Restore tool using one of the following methods:
• Click Restore in the Printer Groups tab of the Fiery Central Manager.
• In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Device Center > General > Tools, click Launch Backup & Restore, and
then click Restore in Fiery Central Manager.
• From Server > Central Tools, select Manage Backup & Restore, and then click Restore in Fiery Central Manager.
2 Follow the instructions in the Backup & Restore wizard.
During the restore process, Paper Catalog Map will be opened to restore Paper Catalog mapping. You can check
the restored mapping.
Note: A printer group cannot be restored if any of the printer devices are no longer accessible on the network.
Fiery Command WorkStation 51
Managing Fiery Central workflows
Note: The Paper Catalog Map feature is available only if the Fiery Server or non-Fiery printer supports it.
If you are logged on to a Fiery Server on the Fiery Central Server as Administrator, you can create Fiery Central
Paper Catalog entries.
• Access Paper Catalog from Command WorkStation > Device Center > Resources > Paper Catalog.
You must set up the printer's paper catalog and associate printer trays with paper catalog media before printing for
correct operation. Printers are assumed to have paper catalog media stocked at all times.
1 In the Add/Remove Printers window, select a printer in the Selected Printers list and click Edit/Configure.
To access the Add/Remove Printers window, you must be adding or editing a printer group.
The Paper Catalog Map utility appears. If a printer has a paper catalog, you must map the printer's paper catalog
entries to the appropriate Fiery Central Paper Catalog.
You can import the printer's paper catalog entries into the Fiery Central Paper Catalog by selecting Add as New
in the Fiery Central Paper Catalog column.
If a printer does not have a paper catalog, you must map the Fiery Central Paper Catalog entries to appropriate
media attributes for that printer.
Note: To define job specific search paths, use the VDP tab of Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties for the
specific job.
2 Click Add for the type of resources you want to add locations for: Common, PPML, or VPS.
• PPML objects use PPML (Personalized Print Markup Language), an XML-based language developed by PODi,
considered an industry standard. To print documents in PPML format, use a third-party software application
that is compatible with PPML format.
• VPS objects use Creo VPS, an extension of the PostScript language developed by Creo. All of the page elements
must be packaged inside the Creo VPS file. To print, you must have an application that emits the Creo VPS
data stream.
Note: Some PPML and Creo VPS jobs do not contain all of the variable data job resources in a single file. In these
cases, specify the location of the variable data job external resources so that Fiery Central can access them. These
shared locations must have read permissions from Fiery Central and the Fiery Servers.
3 Type the Web address for the DSF website in the DSF URL field.
Viewing jobs
You can view the content of jobs in a number of different ways.
The content of spooled, unprocessed jobs can be viewed in:
• Fiery Preview. See Fiery Preview in Fiery Command WorkStation on page 53.
• Reader View, which is accessed from the Fiery Preview window. See Open Reader View on page 59.
The content of processed jobs can be viewed in:
• Job Summary pane in the Fiery Command WorkStation window. See View information for processed jobs on
page 54.
• Preview window for processed jobs. See Preview a raster image on page 61.
• Fiery ImageViewer, if supported by the Fiery Server. See ImageViewer on page 196.
You can view the page and sheet content of a job in Fiery Preview and specify print options. You can perform
additional make-ready tasks in preparation for printing jobs, including imposition.
Fiery Preview provides a pre-raster image process (pre-RIP) preview and displays jobs that have been spooled, but
not processed. If you have a license for Fiery Impose, Fiery Compose, or Fiery JobMaster activated, you can integrate
the functions of the combined workflows in the Fiery Preview window, and view the results of your actions before
printing.
• Fiery Impose converts jobs to PDF file format and allows you to create imposition layouts.
• Fiery Compose allows you to set chapters, add blank pages, and specify different media for a job.
• Fiery JobMaster offers access to complex document preparation tasks such as tab insertion, scanning,
chapterization, page numbering, and late stage editing. Fiery JobMaster includes options.
Note: For information on Fiery Impose, Fiery Compose, or Fiery JobMaster, see Fiery JobMaster Help.
Note: If you have an activated license for Fiery Impose, Fiery Compose, or Fiery JobMaster, you can create a brand
new print job that opens in the Fiery Preview window by selecting the New Job icon in the Fiery Command
WorkStation tool bar. Create a new job when you want to prepare a job from a scanned document, print a tabs-only
job, or combine existing jobs, starting from an empty job.
Reader View is accessed from the main Fiery Preview window and displays jobs as they will look after they are
printed.
If you select Preview for a processed job, the job opens in raster preview mode. Printed and archived jobs with raster
data can be previewed. Archived jobs with raster data must be archived on the Fiery Server.
Fiery Command WorkStation 54
Viewing jobs
If you have Fiery Graphic Arts Package, Premium Edition, installed, you can view the raster image of a processed job
in Fiery ImageViewer and adjust colors and perform other soft-proofing actions. Fiery ImageViewer is accessed from
a button in the raster preview window.
To open a rasterized job and specify settings in Fiery Impose, Fiery Compose, or Fiery JobMaster, select the job in
Fiery Command WorkStation Job Center and select Remove Raster from the Actions menu.
The Job Summary pane lists specific information for a selected job. If the job has been processed, thumbnails for all
pages in that job are displayed.
If a job is processed, you can view thumbnails of the content in the Job Summary pane in Job Center. The Preview
window for a processed job does not open the window for Fiery Compose, Fiery JobMaster, or Fiery Impose. You can
open a processed job in Fiery ImageViewer if the Fiery Graphic Arts Package, Premium Edition, or the Fiery
Productivity Package is supported on the Fiery Server.
Start Fiery Command WorkStation and select a processed job in the Held list to display it in the Job Summary pane.
If the job is spooled, but not processed, information about the job is displayed, but the thumbnails are not.
The Job Summary pane is at the right of the Command WorkStation window.
1 Job name
4 Navigation tools. The magnifying glass opens the job in the Preview window, if processed, or the Fiery Preview window, if
not processed..
Fiery Command WorkStation 55
Viewing jobs
5 Total number of pages in the job or number of VDP records (only for VDP jobs) and number of copies
6 Media information, such as page size, orientation, media type or media weight
9 Last action taken on the job, such as spooled, processed, or printed, along with a date and time stamp
Note: If the job is processed, you will see the job in raster preview mode and have access to limited functions.
2 Choose one of the following ways to open the Fiery Preview window:
The following illustration shows the standard Fiery Preview window. If the Page View and Settings panes are hidden
when you first open the window, click the arrows at the left and right of the toolbar respectively.
Fiery Command WorkStation 56
Viewing jobs
1 Toggle arrows to access Page View See Page View, Sheet View, and Reader View on page 57
4 Thumbnails in Sheet View See "About viewing sheets" in Fiery JobMaster Help
7 Zoom controls See "Using the Zoom tools" in Fiery JobMaster Help
Fiery Command WorkStation 57
Viewing jobs
1 Page View pane See "View a job in the Compose window" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
2 Page View toolbar icons See "Toolbar icons in Compose" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
3 Thumbnails in Page View See "Viewing pages as thumbnails" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
4 Sheet View toolbar icons See "Toolbar icons in Compose" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
5 Sheet View pane See "View a job in the Compose window" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
6 Thumbnails in Sheet View See "About viewing sheets" in Fiery JobMaster Help.
Settings pane
In the Settings pane of the Fiery Preview window, you can specify imposition settings, and the changes you make are
displayed in the Sheet View pane.
Imposition settings are performed with Fiery Impose software. If you have not activated a Fiery Impose license, you
can still impose a spooled job in the Fiery Preview window and use Fiery Impose in Demo mode. You will be able to
save the job as a .dbp file to the Fiery Server, but not as Adobe PDF. You can print the job, but with a watermark.
Note: If the Settings pane is not displayed in the Fiery Preview window, click the arrows in the Fiery Preview window
toolbar. To specify imposition settings, select Booklet or Gangup from the menu at the top of the Settings pane.
Fiery Command WorkStation 59
Viewing jobs
1 Thumbnails in Page View pane See "Viewing jobs as thumbnails" in Fiery JobMaster Help
2 Thumbnails in Sheet View pane See "Viewing jobs as thumbnails" in Fiery JobMaster Help
3 Settings pane See "Previewing a job" in Fiery JobMaster Help
2 Apply settings to the job in the Fiery Preview window and save.
• Use the arrows at the bottom of the window to navigate through the document. Zoom controls are at the right.
• The pan icon allows you to move the image around the window.
• Click Media Info to display information about the document.
• Rotate the document by holding down the Alt key and the left mouse. Rolling the mouse wheel allows you to
zoom the image.
Fiery Command WorkStation 60
Viewing jobs
3 Navigation controls
4 Zoom controls
Zoom in.
Zoom out.
Show sheet content toggles between thumbnail view and the wireframe view. The wireframe view shows the
pagination of records.
Fiery Command WorkStation 61
Viewing jobs
If a job is processed, you can view thumbnails of the content in the Job Summary pane in Job Center, or in the
Preview window, where the raster image is displayed.
The Preview window for a processed job does not open Fiery Impose, Fiery Compose, or Fiery JobMaster. You can
open Fiery ImageViewer if the Fiery Graphic Arts Package, Premium Edition, or the Fiery Productivity Package is
supported on the Fiery Server
To open a raster preview of a processed job, select the job in the Held list and do one of the following:
• Right-click (Windows) or Control-click (Mac OS) the selected job in the Held list and select Preview.
The following illustration shows the raster preview of a job.
2 Thumbnails
3 Raster file
Fiery Command WorkStation 62
Viewing jobs
4 Navigation tools for paging through the job and displaying the sheet number
Launch ImageViewer opens the Fiery ImageViewer window if the Fiery Server supports either the Fiery
Graphic Arts Package, Premium Edition, or the Fiery Productivity Package.
• Navigate through the job by records or finished sets and pages or surfaces. The navigation parameters displayed
change dynamically, depending on whether the job is imposed or not.
• Change the size of the thumbnails.
• Expand or collapse records or thumbnails.
• Open the job in Fiery ImageViewer, if it is supported by the Fiery Server.
Note: The Save, Duplicate, and Delete functions are not available for VDP jobs displayed in the Preview window.
When a processed VDP job is displayed before imposition in the Preview window, you can navigate by records and
pages. You can also open the job in Fiery ImageViewer, if it is supported by the Fiery Server.
Note: The Save, Duplicate, and Delete functions are not available for VDP jobs displayed in the Preview window.
Fiery Command WorkStation 63
Viewing jobs
When a processed VDP job is displayed after imposition in the Preview window, you can navigate by finished sets
and surfaces.
If you want to impose a processed VDP job, you must remove the raster data, impose the job, save it in .dbp format,
process it, and then open it in the Preview window. You can also open the job in Fiery ImageViewer, if it is supported
by the Fiery Server.
Note: The Save, Duplicate, and Delete functions are not available for VDP jobs displayed in the Preview window.
Fiery Command WorkStation 64
Viewing jobs
Printing
You can print files by importing them directly into Fiery Server queues, or import jobs that have been archived to
external locations (other than the Fiery Server hard disk).
1 Drag and drop files or folders from the computer to the Printing or Processing queue, or the Held list.
The Import dialog box does not display when you drag and drop files or folders to these locations. The entire
contents of folders are imported.
4 If desired, use Move up and Move down buttons to change the order of import.
Fiery Command WorkStation 66
Printing
The two options above only appear if server presets or virtual printers have been set up on the Fiery Server.
• Select the file on your computer desktop and drag and drop it into the specified queue in Fiery Command
WorkStation.
• Click File > Import Archived Job.
2 Select the directory containing the archived job.
If the directory you want does not appear in the list, click Add to locate and add the directory, and then click OK.
3 Click OK.
The print options for a job, accessed from the Job Properties window, specify such information as whether the job
should print single-sided or duplex or be stapled.
You can specify print options from the printer driver on the client computer originating the print job. After a print
job reaches the Fiery Server, an operator can use Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties to view or change
these print options. For example, an operator might do the following:
3 If you want to override the print options, make the changes, and then click OK to save your override settings or
click Print to save and print the job with your settings.
When you click Print, the Job Properties window closes and prints the job with the current settings.
Some settings cannot be applied instantly to jobs that are processed and held, because the job needs to be re-
processed to apply the settings. In this case, the "Jobs will be processed again before printing" message will appear
in Job Properties.
The Job Properties window allows you to print a summary of a job’s current properties.
1 In the toolbar of the Job Properties window, click the Summary icon.
Note: Some print options available in the printer driver are not displayed in the Job Properties window. For
information about specific print options and settings and where to set them, see your Fiery Server
documentation.
Fiery Command WorkStation 68
Printing
Print Causes the Fiery Server to queue the job to process and then print. If the job
is already processed, the Fiery Server will queue the job to print.
Print and Hold Causes the Fiery Server to queue the job to process, print, and then return
the job to the Hold queue in a processed state.
Print and Delete Causes the Fiery Server to queue the job to process, print, and then delete
the job. This action ensures the printed job is not saved to the Printed list,
which is often required for secure printing.
Hold Causes the job to be spooled to the Fiery Server until the operator takes
further action. Held jobs can exist in a pre-processed or processed state.
Process and Hold Causes the Fiery Server to queue the job to process and then return the job
to the Hold queue. This action also generates an additional copy of the job
in the Printed list. You can use this job action to preview any job before
printing it.
Proof Print Allows you to print a single copy of a job to verify output. After the job
finishes printing, it is set back to the original number of copies and retains
the raster that was created (or used if pre-existing) from the proof print.
Proof Print is available from the right-click menu, Job Properties, and Hot
Folders.
Quick Access Contains duplicate print options from the other job properties groups. It is
customizable, so any print option can be added or removed from the view.
The Quick Access tab lets you find print options quickly without browsing
through all of the Job Properties tabs.
Job Info All information about the job, including user information that may be
required for user authentication, secure print properties, and job handling.
Layout Defines the imposition of the print job and the booklet process on the
media/sheet, except for positioning compensates for finishing options, for
example, Tray Alignment.
Color Color settings and graphic arts features (when turned on). This tab will be
hidden when connected to a black-and-white printer.
Image All Image Quality settings supported by the connected Fiery Server and
printer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 69
Printing
Finishing Print options related only to finishing equipment on the printer, and also
image shifting to compensate for finishing options.
VDP All Variable Data Printing (VDP) settings, such as FreeForm and advanced
VDP settings.
Stamping All image stamping options that add or hide/remove any image on the job.
This also includes watermark properties that define the placement and style
of the watermark.
Note: The Stamping tab may not be supported for all Fiery Servers.
Note: User Defined custom templates require PDF source files. PostScript files are not supported.
When you open a job in the Fiery Impose window from Job Properties, the job appears in wireframe view in the
Sheet View pane. Compose settings and product intent controls in the Settings pane are not available.
1 Do one of the following:
Imposition templates
Fiery Impose provides predefined templates. You can also create custom templates.
The predefined templates are Normal, Booklet, and Gangup:
Note: Custom templates created with Japanese style marks can only be used within Fiery Impose.
In the Preferences dialog box, you can set a path to the folder or directory where you want to store custom
templates.
Imposition templates can also be edited from Hot Folders, if you have a Fiery Impose license. The custom imposition
templates now support the User Defined finish size workflow, which uses the trim size set for the original PDF job.
Note: The User Defined finish size workflow requires PDF source files. PostScript files are not supported.
For more information about the imposition templates, see Fiery JobMaster Help.
Applying presets
Job presets can be applied using one of the following methods:
• Import a job into Fiery Command WorkStation using File > Import Job or the Import toolbar icon in Job Center.
You can then select Apply workflow and then select from the list of presets in the File(s) to import window.
• Select a job in the Held/Printed/Archived pane in Job Center and click the Properties toolbar icon. Select a Local
Preset or Server Preset from the Presets list.
• Right-click a job in the Held/Printed/Archived pane in Job Center, select Apply Workflow and then select a preset
from the list.
If you are an Administrator, you can create, edit, rename, unpublish, publish, and delete Server Presets in Device
Center > Workflows > Job Presets. You can save a Local Preset in the Job Properties window only.
You create a Local Preset or Server Preset by choosing the settings in the Job Properties window, and then saving
them in the Presets list.
Administrators can save a preset as a Local Preset or Server Preset. Operators can save only a Local Preset.
Administrators and operators can save settings in the Job Properties window as local presets.
1 Double-click a job in the Held or Printed list, or select the job and do one of the following:
4 Enter a descriptive name for the preset, and select Local or Printer Group Local for the preset type.
For Fiery Central, the preset name is unique across the printer groups.
5 Click Save.
The Local Presets are available any time you access the Job Properties window. They remain on your local hard
disk until you delete them.
Note: The user authentication information, such as the user name and password, are not saved as part of the
preset.
Fiery Command WorkStation 72
Printing
Administrators can save settings in the Job Properties window as server presets. These presets are saved on the
Fiery Server and shared with its users.
1 Click Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets.
2 Click New.
For Fiery Central, the printer group is automatically selected according to the selection in the preset pane.
5 For Fiery Central, select one of the available printer groups and specify print settings from Job Properties.
6 Click Define to specify the job properties, and then click Save.
Note: The user authentication information, such as the user name and password, are not saved as part of the
preset.
The Server Presets are available any time you access Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets or the Job
Properties window. They remain on the Fiery Server until an Administrator deletes them.
After a Server Preset is created, the Settings pane (located on the right side) shows the settings modified from
the defaults, and locked settings. The Server Preset is published automatically so it can be shared with other
users connected to the Fiery Server.
You can choose a different preset to apply to all jobs. You can also edit or rename a preset, delete a local preset, or
revert to the default preset.
You work with presets in the Job Properties window. To display it, double-click a job in the Held or Printed list, or
select the job and click Job Center > Properties.
You can change the current set of print options to another preset for a job.
• Select any job from the Held or Printed list and do one of the following:
Edit a preset
A preset includes most print options that you set in the Job Properties window. You can override a setting in the
Job Properties window after choosing a preset.
1 In the Job Properties window, under Presets, select Manage Local Presets.
2 Select the preset you want to edit, and change the print settings.
The Presets field becomes blank.
4 Type the same preset name, specify Local Presets or Server Presets, and then click OK to save the preset.
You can delete a local preset with the Manage Local Presets feature in the Job Properties window.
1 In the Job Properties window, under Presets, select Manage Local Presets.
Rename a preset
You can rename a local preset with the Manage Local Presets feature in the Job Properties window.
1 In the Job Properties window, under Presets, select Manage Local Presets.
You can apply the default preset to a job to revert the print options to their default settings.
• In the Job Properties window, under Presets, select Printer's Default.
Server Presets
Server Presets provide a consistent set of printing options that all users can use. Users can save Local Presets to their
computer, but only an Administrator can save, edit, publish, and delete Server Presets.
Server Presets are accessible from:
• Fiery Command WorkStation (select Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets, and from Job Center >
Properties)
• Hot Folders (see Hot Folders Help)
Fiery Command WorkStation 74
Printing
Default Server Presets (available only for FS200/200 Pro and later)
To aid users getting started with Fiery Server workflows, five default server presets that represent commonly used
settings are included. The default server presets are factory installed. At Fiery Server start up, the relevant default
presets are shown based on Fiery Server default paper size and language settings.
The default server presets are:
• Small_booklet
• Large_booklet
• Duplex_grayscale
• Duplex_staple
• 2up_landscape
You can edit, delete, or unpublish a server preset in Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets.
You must be logged on to the Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server as Administrator to perform these operations.
If you edit or delete a Server Preset that is currently being used, the changes will affect only future jobs. The changed
preset settings are applied instantly to any Hot Folders or virtual printers using the specified Server Preset.
You can overwrite an existing Server Preset the same way you can overwrite files on a computer. A Server Preset can
be overwritten from Job Properties.
Jobs already in the Held or Printed list of the Fiery Server do not automatically reflect edits made to the preset. If you
want to update any jobs in the queues of the Fiery Server with a newly edited preset, you need to re-apply the preset
to the job using Job Properties.
Fiery Command WorkStation 75
Printing
1 To edit a preset from Device Center, select the preset you want to edit, and click Edit from the toolbar in
Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets.
a) Enter a description for the change (optional).
b) Click Define to change the print settings.
c) Click OK.
2 To edit a preset from Job Properties, right-click a job in the Held or Printed list, and select Job Properties.
a) Select a server preset from the Presets list for the job.
b) Make any changes to Job Properties, which you wish to apply to the preset.
c) In the Presets list, select Save Preset, select Server Preset, and type the exact name for the preset.
d) Click Save, and then click OK to overwrite the existing preset.
2 Click Yes.
Any Hot Folders and virtual printers linked to the deleted preset will be disconnected. However, they will
preserve the preset settings of the deleted preset.
An unpublished preset is not available for use in the printer drivers or the Job Properties window. After you
unpublish a Server Preset, you can publish it again.
1 Select a Server Preset with the published icon from the list.
3 Click Yes.
Any Hot Folders and virtual printers linked to the unpublished preset will be disconnected. However, they
will preserve the preset settings of the unpublished preset.
You can lock or unlock a server preset’s print settings in Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets.
You must be logged on to Fiery Server as Administrator to perform these operations.
Fiery Command WorkStation 76
Printing
• It is applied to all files imported to Fiery Command WorkStation using the preset.
• It can be overridden in the printer driver job properties after it is selected, but when it is overridden, the Preset
list becomes blank.
• Hot Folders jobs also inherit the same locked settings (assuming the Hot Folders uses the Server Preset).
• Virtual printers show the settings as locked. Client printer drivers connected to a virtual printer are unable to
modify the setting.
Locks apply only at the time of job submission. After the jobs are at the Fiery Server, any locked setting can be edited
in Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties.
You must be logged on to Fiery Server as Administrator to lock or unlock print settings in Device Center >
Workflows > Job Presets.
1 Select the preset you want to edit, and click Edit from the toolbar.
You can export Server Presets to a file (Exported Presets.fjp) from one Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server, and then
import the file on another similar Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server in Device Center > Workflows > Job Presets.
You can also export Server Presets for safekeeping by using the Backup & Restore tool (Device Center > General >
Tools). Preset Backup files cannot be restored to a different Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server.
When importing a presets file, the new presets can be merged with existing ones, or can replace existing presets.
You must be logged on to the Fiery Server as Administrator to export and import Server Presets.
Fiery Command WorkStation 77
Printing
Administrators can export Server Presets for use on another Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server.
1 Click Export from the toolbar.
3 Click Save.
After exporting Server Presets from one Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server, administrators can import them for
use on another similar Fiery Server or Fiery Central Server.
1 Click Import from the toolbar.
4 Click Open.
You can remove the raster data from a job if necessary (for example, to change a job property that requires
reprocessing).
Raster data is generated and linked with a job that is processed or processed and held.
Printing methods
You can shift page content by using the Tray Alignment feature, verify that the copier/printer is performing correctly
by using the Sample Print feature during a long print job, and check output by using the Proof Print feature.
Fiery Command WorkStation 78
Printing
4 Specify the paper size loaded in the tray from the Paper Size list.
Note: The size you specify must match the actual paper size. For example, if you specify Letter size paper but load
Legal size paper in the tray, the tray alignment effort is invalidated. Perform a new tray alignment for each
combination of tray and paper size.
5 Select Align for duplex to print a duplex page, or clear this check box to print a single-sided page.
7 When the page has printed, follow the instructions on the alignment page.
8 In the Adjustment Settings area, enter the value where the fold crosses each of the three scales marked A, B, and
C, for Side 1. If you chose to align for duplex printing, enter the values for the three scales on Side 2 of the page.
Click Apply.
9 After you enter all of the alignment values, click Print Verification Page to print the new alignment page.
10 Click Close.
Sample Print
The Sample Print feature allows you to print extra pages to an easily accessible output tray during a long print job, to
verify that the printer is performing as expected.
For example, when a job is currently printing to a closed elevator (such as 1000 pages to an output tray that cannot
be opened until the entire job is completed), you can use the sample print function to print a separate page or
finished output set to an open output tray to verify the output. If the output is unsatisfactory, you can take corrective
action.
Use Sample Print only with printers that have multiple output trays; it is useful when one of the output trays is
closed and not easily accessed during printing.
You can print an extra sheet or output set as follows:
You can set up the Sample Print default settings for the specified Fiery Server using Configure (Server > Configure).
(See Configuring Fiery Server settings on page 29.)
When the job is printing, you can initiate a sample print. The default setup values are applied and any existing
sample print command in progress is overridden.
1 To initiate a sample print, select Server > Start Sample Print while a job is printing.
The Fiery Server performs the sample print based on the options specified in Configure.
If Start Sample Print appears dimmed or unavailable, then the Fiery Server is already performing a sample print
or it is not available for the specified Fiery Server.
You can configure the Fiery Server to print sample prints at a predefined interval that spans print jobs.
This lets you print sample pages on a regular basis, either as a regular spot check or as a more methodical process
where you can create an archive of printed sheets documenting the print quality at regular intervals.
In Configure, an Administrator can specify the content to print, the interval at which it is printed, and the output
tray to use for the sample print job.
Option Description
New HTML-based Configure In Configure, click Job Management > Sample Print.
Fiery Command WorkStation 80
Printing
• Frequency - Specify Every or On-demand. When you select Every, the Fiery Server prints a sample repeatedly
as defined by the printed sheet(s) interval. A sample print can be printed for all jobs until the Fiery Server is
restarted or the sample print mode is canceled, or for the current job only until it finishes printing or is
canceled. When you select On-demand, a single sample is printed.
Note: Printed sheets include all pages printed by the Fiery Server, including system pages.
• Content - Specify Sheet (for any kind of job) or Sheet (for uncollated job) / Set (for collated jobs). When you
select Sheet (for any kind of job), a single sheet is printed as the sample. If the job is collated, an entire output
set is printed as the sample. If the job is uncollated, a single sheet is printed as the sample. If the sample content
is a set and the printed sheet interval triggers the Fiery Server to print a sample, the Fiery Server will begin
printing the sample at the beginning of the next set.
• Output Tray - Specify the output tray for the sample print jobs. All installed output trays that do not require
finishing options are listed.
Note: The job's finishing options are not applied to the sample print job, except for duplex options.
Proof Print
Use Proof Print to print a proof (copy) to check the printed output of your job without changing the job's original
copy count.
When you apply Proof Print to your job, the selected job is sent to the Printing queue with the number of copies set
to one. The original job retains the specified number of copies and job properties and uses the raster data that was
created from the proof print to print subsequent jobs.
If you apply Proof Print to a processed job (with a raster), the job goes directly to the Printing queue and does not
process again unless a change is made to the job.
Proof Print jobs appear in the Job Log with the number of copies set to one.
Additionally, you can use Sample Print to print extra pages to an output tray during a long print job to verify that the
copier/printer is performing as expected.
Print a proof
You can use Proof Print by right-clicking on a job in the Held or Printed list, or you can access the command from
the Actions menu or from job actions within Job Properties and Hot Folders.
• Do one of the following:
• From Job Center, right-click a job in the Held or Printed list and select Proof Print.
• Click Actions > Proof Print.
If you select Proof Print with a variable data printing job, the printed proof is one copy of the first record. If you
select Proof Print with an imposed variable data printing job, the printed proof is a set associated with the first
record (all sheets that contain the first record).
Fiery Command WorkStation 81
Printing
Sequential Print
The Sequential Print feature allows the Fiery Server to maintain the job order on certain jobs sent from the network.
The workflow is "First In, First Out" (FIFO).
This feature is used especially in the production print and CRD (Corporate Reprographics Department)
environments because jobs are submitted in a specific record or report order. Usually each record is sent as a
separate job, which may contain a few pages.
The Fiery Server needs to know which jobs are being submitted to the Sequential Print queue, and ensure that any
other jobs submitted during a sequential run do not interrupt the sequential run, or end up printed in the middle of
it.
Sequential printing can be configured on the Fiery Server. After it is turned on, the Sequential Print queue will be
available through the following supported printing protocols:
• Network traffic
• Size of the jobs in the sequential print run
• Spool time, which is the amount of time spent in preparing each job to ensure that time-out does not elapse
before the entire sequential run is submitted
Setting the time-out for a long period may result in the Fiery Server locking the system from processing other files
after the last file in the sequential run was spooled.
Jobs submitted in a sequential print run arrive at the Processing queue and wait until all jobs are received, then they
are submitted to the Printing queue in the order that they were received.
Fiery Command WorkStation 82
Printing
• Rush Print
• Print Next
• Process next
• Re-order jobs processing and printing jobs in queue
• Suspend on Mismatch
• Preview
• Hold
• Sample Print
• Cancel a job from the sequential printing group
Option Description
New HTML-based Configure In Configure, click Job Submission > Sequential Print.
4 Select the Publish Sequential Print Queue check box if you want the queue to be available to all users on the
network.
Quick Doc Merge allows you to merge multiple files or jobs together so they can be printed as a single job on the
Fiery Server.
Documents to be merged must be either PostScript or PDF format. When merged into one job on the Fiery Server,
the job becomes VDP format.
A Quick Doc Merge job overwrites all Job Properties settings for the individual documents to the Fiery Server default
settings. Therefore, you must set Job Properties after you combine the separate documents into the single Quick Doc
Merge job.
• From Job Center, right-click a job in the Held list and select Merge Jobs.
• Click Actions > Merge Jobs.
Note: Only pre-processed jobs can be merged together.
2 Click Add from Network to browse and select PostScript or PDF files to import.
3 Click Add from Fiery to display a list of all PostScript and PDF files in the Hold queue on the Fiery Server.
4 When the jobs you selected are listed, click Move Up or Move Down to change the order in which they are
printed. Click Remove to remove a job.
6 Type a name for the merged document in the Save QDM Job as field.
7 Click Save.
The job is created and listed in the Held list.
8 Specify job properties for the new Quick Doc Merge job.
Note: FreeForm settings in Job Properties cannot be applied to a Quick Doc Merge job.
Fiery Command WorkStation 84
Managing jobs
Managing jobs
Search for and locate jobs on a connected Fiery Server using search parameters such as the file name, file size, or
date.
Limit your search to jobs on a selected Fiery Server or on all connected Fiery Servers. Search for jobs in the Held,
Printed, or Archived list.
1 Click Edit > Search or type in a file name in the global Search field located to the right of the Job Center toolbar
buttons.
4 Select a specific Fiery Server or all Fiery Servers from the Servers list.
5 Click the Search icon (magnifying glass) to locate the jobs that meet the specified search criteria.
6 Select a job from the results list to view detailed information about the job.
7 Click Locate Item to locate the specific job from the search results.
Create a filtered-view tab (a list of criteria) to search for jobs on the Fiery Server.
For example, you might want to use this feature to search for A4-sized documents in the Printed list on the Fiery
Server.
Fiery Command WorkStation 85
Managing jobs
Limitations:
• Filtered-view tabs are client-specific. They cannot be used or shared with other client computers on your
network.
• Fiery Command WorkStation can have up to 13 tabs. For example, you have 3 tabs by default (the Held, Printed,
and Archived lists) and you can create up to 10 more.
• Legacy Fiery Servers are supported (System 8R2 and later).
1 From Fiery Command WorkStation, in Job Center, click the (+) sign next to the Held, Printed, and Archived lists.
The Add tab dialog box displays.
Note: After you click OK, you cannot change the name of the tab or these choices.
Your new tab appears next to the Held, Printed, and Archived lists.
3 On the new tab, fine-tune your search using the filters at the top of each column in the list (see Filter a job list on
page 85).
4 If desired, click the (X) next to the name of a tab you want to delete.
You can filter the view of a job list to display only jobs that match specific attributes.
In the Held, Printed, and Archived lists, and in the Job Log, each column displays an attribute of the job. You can
filter the job list to restrict the display to only jobs that match specified values for one or more attributes.
You can specify different filters for different job lists and servers. Filter settings remain until you change them or exit
Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 In any field that appears below a column heading in a job list, type the value that you want to search for.
If an arrow appears next to the field, you can also click the arrow and select from a list of values.
The list of jobs is restricted to the jobs that match the search value.
2 Optionally, type a value in one or more additional fields to further restrict the list.
Only jobs that match all of the search values are displayed.
3 To clear all filters and display all jobs in the list, click Clear Filter.
Fiery Command WorkStation 86
Managing jobs
You can export the list of jobs in either the Held, Printed, or Archived list.
1 Click either the Held, Printed, or Archived list.
3 Navigate to the location you want to export the file and click Save.
You can move jobs to the Processing or Printing queue from the Held, Printed, and Archived lists. Additionally, you
can specify that a job be printed and then removed from the queue.
• Select any job from the Held, Printed, or Archived lists, click Actions and select one of the following:
Reorder jobs
• From Job Center, select a job in the Printing or Processing queue and drag the file either up or down in the job
list.
• Select a job in the Processing or Printing queue and select Actions > Move Up or Actions > Move Down.
• If supported on your Fiery Server, select a job in the Processing or Printing queue and select Actions > Print
Next to allow the Fiery Server to process the job as soon as the current job is finished processing.
• If supported on your Fiery Server, select a job in the Processing or Printing queue and select Actions > Rush
Print to allow the Fiery Server to interrupt a currently printing job to print a Rush Print job. The Fiery Server
waits until the currently finishing set of the job is completed before printing the Rush Print job. After the Rush
Print job is finished, the Fiery Server resumes printing the interrupted job.
With the Send to command, you can transfer jobs to another connected Fiery Server.
When you transfer a job to an identical Fiery Server, raster data is transferred (if available). When you transfer a job
to a different Fiery Server, only the source file is transferred, not the raster data; jobs need to be reprocessed on the
target Fiery Server before printing. When transferring a job, review and re-specify, if necessary, all job properties,
because non-identical Fiery Servers may behave differently.
• Select any held job in the Job Center and drag it to another Fiery Server in the Servers list.
• Select any held job in the Job Center and click Actions > Send to.
• Right-click any held job in the Job Center and select Send to.
2 Select a Fiery Server.
Archive jobs
Archive jobs internally to the Fiery Server hard disk or externally to removable media or networked drives.
After you archive a job, it appears in the Archived tab of Job Center.
Fiery Command WorkStation 88
Managing jobs
• Select any job in the Printed or Held list and drag it to the Archive lists.
Note: You cannot drag jobs from a computer to the Archive list. You can only drag jobs to the Archive list if
they are already on the Fiery Server
• Select any held job in the Job Center and click Actions > Archive.
• Right-click any held job in the Job Center and click Archive.
2 Do one of the following:
3 If you do not want to change the archive options for future archived jobs, select Don't ask me again; then click
OK.
Fiery JDF adds support for various JDF intent and process elements. You can use Fiery Command WorkStation to
view JDF settings and resolve errors, such as media mismatch, during job processing.
Job Definition Format (JDF) is an open standard, XML-based file format that allows you to automate the print
production process by passing data between different applications. By simplifying data exchange, JDF makes digital
production faster and more efficient, while also facilitating faster movement of job details. A JDF electronic ticket
specifies how a job is to be handled and produced from customer concept to final production.
Think of the JDF file as an electronic version of a customer’s specifications for a particular job. For instance, a job
ticket with the customer’s request for a job with the specifications “100 copies of a 10-page document on 20# letter-
size white paper, printed duplex, black-and- white” would be represented in a standardized XML format readable by
JDF-enabled devices, in other words, the JDF ticket.
Job Messaging Format (JMF) is the communication protocol used in a JDF workflow. JMF messages contain
information about events (start, stop, error), status (available, offline, and so on), results (count, waste, and so on).
Fiery JDF turns on integrated, bi-directional communication of JDF intent or JDF process job tickets between JDF-
submitting applications a Fiery Server using JMF.
Support for JMF allows the Fiery Server to provide feedback on the status of the JDF job and production data (such
as time of delivery/printing and materials used) to the JDF-submitting application.
JDF must be turned on in Configure to allow JDF jobs to be submitted to the Fiery Server. You can specify JDF
parameters when you configure the Fiery Server.
If a JDF-submitting application has not been turned on, the following indicators alert users to jobs from applications
not yet tested and certified:
• A warning icon is displayed for the job in the Fiery Command WorkStation job list.
• A warning message is displayed in the JDF Details dialog box.
• A JMF comment is returned to the JDF-submitting application with information on how to certify the
application.
During job processing, the Fiery Server uses JMF (JDF's Job Messaging Format) to send back status and audit
information to the JDF job-submitting application.
When a JDF job is submitted to the Fiery Server, the job is checked for any errors or conflicts. If there are none, the
operator can select additional print actions from the Actions menu in Fiery Command WorkStation, or choose to
print the job directly.
If there is an error, the job is flagged in the Held list with an error icon.
The Job Errors window gives you a choice to fix or ignore JDF ticket conflicts. Ignoring a conflict may result in the
job being printed, but with missing JDF information.
After a JDF job is printed, a message signaling job completion is automatically returned to the submitting application
if the Fiery Server has been configured for Automate Job Close. For Manual Job Close, the operator needs to close
the job through the Fiery Command WorkStation window when printing is completed to his satisfaction.
Note: You cannot import a JDF job or send it from the printer driver.
2 The job is sent through JMF (Job Messaging Format). The submitting application sends the job to the JMF URL
of the Fiery Server.
3 Enter the JMF URL of the Fiery Server in the following format:
http://<host>:<port> (for example, http://192.168.1.159:8010)
Fiery Command WorkStation 91
Fiery JDF Jobs
The default JDF set of headings is added. Click More to see additional JDF categories.
The following tabs are available from the JDF Settings window:
• Media - Displays the media attributes of the JDF job next to the corresponding Paper Catalog entry. Media for
the JDF job can be mapped manually to a Paper Catalog entry in this tab. See Enabling JDF-submitting
applications on page 90.
• Job Info - Displays information found in the JDF ticket. Allows you to specify additional MIS details and add
comments.
• Run List - Displays the customer-supplied files used to generate the content of the JDF job. Allows you to add,
edit, and reorder the files in the window.
• Close Job - Allows the job to be manually closed by the operator.
The following actions are available in every tab:
• Close Job - Closes the job, according to the parameters set in Configure.
• View Paper Ticket - This option is turned on if the JDF-submitting application included a human-viewable copy
of the original job ticket.
• OK - Saves the settings and closes the window.
• Cancel - Closes the window without saving any changes to settings.
• Job Header
• Scheduling
• Customer Info
MIS Details
The MIS Details pane, select a setting from the drop-down menu for each of the following categories:
Comments
The Comments area is populated with JDF comments as read-only, but you can add comments by clicking the Add
button and typing your comments in the blank field.
The comments appear in the Job Notes field in the Job Properties Job Info tab.
Note: You cannot remove validated paths that are required for the job from the Run List. At least one valid entry is
required for a job.
If the JDF ticket has the file names, but the files cannot be located in the path defined in Configure, an alert icon is
displayed. You can then select Edit and insert the correct path.
You can double-click the entry to open the Add/Edit dialog box.
Fiery Command WorkStation 93
Fiery JDF Jobs
• Paper Catalog - Lists the media specified in the JDF ticket. You can change this entry if a different media was
used.
• Employee ID - Comes from the login the user used when logging in to Fiery Command WorkStation.
• Media Product ID - Refers to the Product ID in Paper Catalog.
• Planned Sheets - Comes from the JDF ticket.
• Actual Sheets - Comes from the Fiery Server Job Log.
You can override the entries for these fields if required, except for Media Product ID and Planned Sheets.
When a JDF ticket is submitted to the Fiery Server, the server attempts to automatically map the specified media for
the JDF job with a corresponding entry in the Paper Catalog on the Fiery Server.
If automatic media mapping fails, you can view the JDF job media in the JDF ticket and manually select a Paper
Catalog media entry for the job.
1 If you want to add the media used in the JDF job, select it from the JDF ticket and add it to the Paper Catalog in
the Media tab.
2 Select Add/Map to Paper Catalog from the Map to Paper Catalog menu.
For general information about adding new media to the Paper Catalog, see Create a new Paper Catalog entry on page
158.
3 In the JDF Settings Media tab, select a corresponding media entry from the Map to Paper Catalog drop-down
menu, or select Add/Map to Paper Catalog, and click OK.
The parameters of the media specified for the JDF job are listed alongside the parameters of the Paper Catalog media
entry selected. You can now print the job.
Fiery Command WorkStation 95
Fiery Dashboard
Fiery Dashboard
Fiery Dashboard is a cloud-based service that monitors production in your print shop and provides analytics on
printer utilization, system uptime, color metrics, media usage, job status and more. It helps you track productivity
and get greater control of your operations.
Fiery Dashboard includes two main components:
• An Internet connection is needed for the client computer running Fiery Command WorkStation.
• A standard Internet browser on the client computer is needed, such as Internet Explorer 10 or later, Chrome 32
or later, Firefox 28 or later, and Safari 5 and later.
• An EFI Passport account must be created.
Fiery Command WorkStation uses the EFI Passport account to authorize the Fiery data collector to upload data from
the connected Fiery Servers.
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Edit > Authorize This Computer.
2 In the Authorize dialog box, click Learn more about Fiery Dashboard or Launch Dashboard
You could skip these steps and go to http://passport.efi.com and follow the instructions to create a user account.
A page opens (in the default browser of the client computer) with easy-to-understand instructions about how to
create an EFI Passport account.
You can sign on to Fiery Dashboard through the Authorize dialog box in Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation, click Edit > Authorize This Computer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 96
Fiery Dashboard
Data collection occurs through the Fiery data collector that runs in the background on the client computer.
Data is collected and uploaded to the cloud regardless of whether Fiery Command WorkStation is currently running
or not.
After you authorize data collection, the Job Log data is uploaded to the authorized account. Authorizing Fiery
Dashboard will allow information to be collected from all Fiery Servers connected to this instance of Fiery Command
WorkStation. If Fiery Command WorkStation is connected to additional Fiery Servers in the future, data is also
collected from those Fiery Servers, if data collection is still authorized.
The data collected is accessible to the authorized user only. The data collected provides specific metrics, such as
number of color pages printed, or pages printed per users or printer.
2 In the Authorize dialog box, enter the complete EFI Passport user name and password.
Fiery Dashboard is now authorized to collect data with Fiery Command WorkStation.
2 In the Authorize dialog box, enter your EFI Passport password to confirm deauthorization.
Fiery Dashboard stops collecting data from Fiery Command WorkStation.
Fiery Command WorkStation 97
Managing color
Managing color
Color print options control the color management applied to a print job.
The color print options in the Color Management window of Fiery Command WorkStation show the default color
print settings for the Fiery Server. A default color print setting is applied if the color print setting has not otherwise
been specified for the job. A user can override the default settings for a job by changing them in the printer driver or
in Job Properties.
The color print options in the Color Management window of Fiery Command WorkStation are displayed in a flow
diagram representing the color processing that takes place on the Fiery Server. Some advanced processing is not
shown. Advanced color print options are set in the Advanced Edit window.
Default color print settings are referenced in other locations that list color print options. For example, the Printer’s
default setting in the printer driver refers to the default setting.
Calibration is determined by the output profile, not by a print option. The calibration setting displayed is the one
associated with the selected output profile.
For more information about printing with color print options, see Color Printing, which is part of the user
documentation set.
3 In the Advanced Edit window, click the tab containing the print option, select a setting, and click OK.
The CMYK/Grayscale Source and RGB Source print options allow you to define the color spaces of the CMYK and
RGB data, respectively, in your document so that the appropriate color conversion occurs on the Fiery Server.
Commonly used color spaces are available on the Fiery Server. For others, you can import custom profiles to the
Fiery Server.
Fiery Command WorkStation 98
Managing color
CMYK/Grayscale Source
To properly manage color in a printed image that was separated using an ICC profile, the same profile must be
specified for printing the image.
The CMYK/Grayscale Source profile setting you specify depends on the CMYK profile or press standard for which the
CMYK data was separated. This option affects CMYK data only.
• For images that were separated using a custom separation (such as a separation produced with an ICC profile),
select the profile used for RGB to CMYK conversions in the prepress workflow on the Fiery Server with the
CMYK/Grayscale Source setting.
• For images that were separated for a press standard, select the press standard as the CMYK/Grayscale Source
setting.
If the job contains an embedded CMYK profile, select the Use Embedded Profile When Present (CMYK) option. The
embedded profile is applied to CMYK data.
If Use Embedded Profile When Present (CMYK) is not available, select None for CMYK/Grayscale Source.
Note: For some older models of Fiery Server, the embedded profile is applied to CMYK data regardless of the CMYK/
Grayscale Source setting. For all models of Fiery Server, selecting the None setting or the Use Embedded Profile
When Present (CMYK) option results in using the embedded profile.
The CMYK/Grayscale Source option can be set to any CMYK source profile that is present on the Fiery Server.
If you do not want CMYK data in a job to be converted to the output color space, you can select one of the following
settings:
• Bypass Conversion - This setting sends the original CMYK data in the job to the printer without conversion, but
with calibration applied.
• None - This setting sends the original CMYK data in the job to the printer without conversion, but with
calibration applied.
• ColorWise Off - This setting sends the original CMYK data in the job to the printer without calibration applied
and without converting the CMYK data. The CMYK data is still subject to the total toner limit, however.
The ColorWise Off setting is available for a specific job but it cannot be the default setting on the Fiery Server.
You select this setting for a specific job.
Note: When you print with the ColorWise Off setting, make sure that the options you choose in your application
do not cause the application to modify CMYK data. You must specify no color management in the application
when you print with the ColorWise Off setting.
RGB/Lab Source
When you specify a profile for RGB Source, the Fiery Server overrides source color space definitions or profiles that
other color management systems may have specified. For example, if your document contains an embedded RGB
profile, the RGB Source setting overrides it.
When you specify an RGB source profile, the output from the Fiery Server is consistent across platforms. The RGB
Source options are as follows:
• EFIRGB - Specifies an EFI-defined color space recommended for users who have no detailed information about
their RGB data.
• sRGB (PC) - A Microsoft and Hewlett-Packard recommended color space designed for typical home and office
applications.
• Apple Standard - Specifies the color space of an older Mac OS computer monitor.
Fiery Command WorkStation 99
Managing color
• Adobe RGB (1998) - An Adobe-defined color space, used in some prepress workflows as the default working
space for Adobe Photoshop.
• eciRGB v2 - The European Color Initiative (ECI) recommended space for use as an RGB working color space and
color data exchange format for ad agencies, publishers, reproduction, and printing houses.
• Fiery RGB v5 - An EFI-defined color space recommended for users of office applications. This color space is
similar to EFIRGB but is larger and can provide a more desirable blue output.
In cases where you do not want RGB Source to override another specified source color space, select the Use
Embedded Profile When Present (RGB) option.
If Use Embedded Profile When Present (RGB) is not available, select None for RGB Source.
If the Use Embedded Profile When Present (RGB) option is enabled, the Fiery Server ignores RGB Source and uses the
RGB profile embedded in the print job (if any) as the RGB source profile.
The CMYK/Grayscale Device Link option or the RGB/Lab Device Link option, along with the Output Profile option,
allows you to select a CMYK-to-CMYK device link profile or an RGB-to-CMYK device link profile (respectively).
To be selected for a print job, a device link profile must reside on the Fiery Server and be associated with a specific
source profile (CMYK/Grayscale Device Link for a CMYK-to-CMYK device link profile or RGB/Lab Device Link for an
RGB-to-CMYK device link profile) and output profile (the Output Profile setting).
When you select the source profile and output profile settings associated with a device link profile, the Fiery Server
bypasses its normal color management and applies the device link conversion to the color data in the job. The source
profile and the output profile are not used.
Profiles that do not reside on the Fiery Server do not appear as settings. A device link profile that is not associated
with a source profile setting and an output profile setting cannot be selected for a job. Therefore, even though the
source profile and output profile that are associated with a device link profile are not used to calculate color
conversions, they must reside on the Fiery Server.
You can specify whether the Fiery Server uses the source profile (either CMYK or RGB) that is embedded in the
print job rather than the source profile specified in the print settings.
CMYK
If you turn on Use Embedded Profile When Present (CMYK), the Fiery Server ignores the CMYK/Grayscale Source
option and uses the CMYK profile embedded in the print job (if any) as the CMYK source profile. If you turn off this
option, the Fiery Server uses the profile specified in the CMYK/Grayscale Source option.
When a CMYK profile is embedded in a job and Use Embedded Profiles When Present (CMYK) is enabled for the job,
or when a job is sent with PostScript Color Management, the job contains calibrated CMYK (or CIEBasedDEFG)
data. For jobs containing calibrated CMYK, the CMYK processing options are not used. Instead, the RGB/Lab
Rendering Intent option, which normally affects only RGB or Lab data, is used to process the calibrated CMYK data.
The RGB Source setting does not affect calibrated CMYK data.
Fiery Command WorkStation 100
Managing color
RGB
If you turn on Use Embedded Profile When Present (RGB), the Fiery Server ignores the RGB Source option and uses
the RGB profile embedded in the print job (if any) as the RGB source profile. If you turn off this option, the Fiery
Server uses the profile specified in the RGB Source option.
The CMYK Processing Method option allows you to define the CMYK-to-CMYK conversion method for the CMYK
data in a print job.
• Pure Primaries - If your Fiery Server supports this setting, it outputs the primary colors in a job (C only, M only,
or Y only) as primary colors, using only a single colorant. The result is pure-looking primary colors, with minimal
banding in gradients.
Pure Primaries compromises overall color accuracy. Do not use Pure Primaries if color accuracy is important.
• Quick - If your Fiery Server supports this setting, it applies one-dimensional transfer curves to adjust output
densities in the cyan, magenta, yellow, and black channels. This technique leads to eye-pleasing color output
because pure primary colors are not contaminated by other colorants. Do not use Quick for final documents that
are used as press proofs. Other methods offer better color accuracy.
• Full (Source GCR) - Uses the black generation specified by the CMYK Source profile. Colorimetric accuracy is
reduced. This method can be used to preserve pure black without converting it to CMYK. However, the Gray
(CMYK) option is more typically used to preserve pure black. The black generation level that was specified in the
original (source) document is approximated.
• Full (Output GCR) - The recommended method when color accuracy is required. This method provides a
complete and accurate simulation based on colorimetric transformations. With this method, all CMYK data is
reproduced using the black generation specified by the output profile.
Note: When you specify Pure Black On for Black Text and Graphics, and Full (Output GCR) or Full (Source GCR) for
CMYK Processing Method, the black text and graphics in your document are printed with 100% black.
The Black Point Compensation option lets you control the output quality of shadow areas for CMYK source colors.
Use Black Point Compensation to enhance details in shadows when the CMYK source space is larger than the gamut
of the printer. In proofing applications, when the CMYK source space is smaller than the gamut of the printer, do
not use this option.
Note: For RGB source colors, black point compensation is always applied.
Black point compensation works by scaling the source colors so that the darkest point in the source profile maps to
the darkest point in the output profile.
The RGB/Lab Rendering Intent option specifies a rendering intent for RGB/Lab-to-CMYK color conversion. This
conversion can be optimized for the type of color image being printed.
To control the appearance of images, such as prints from office applications or RGB photographs from Adobe
Photoshop, select the appropriate rendering intent. The Fiery Server allows you to select from the four rendering
intents currently found in industry-standard ICC profiles.
Fiery Command WorkStation 101
Managing color
Note: If you experience tone reproduction problems, use the Photographic setting.
Photographic - Typically Photographs, including scans and images Image, Contrast, and Perceptual
results in less-saturated output from stock photography CDs and digital
than presentation rendering camera images.
when printing out-of-gamut
colors. This style preserves
tonal relationships in images.
Relative Colorimetric - Provides Advanced use when color matching is Relative Colorimetric
white point transformation important, but you prefer white colors in the
between the source and document to print as paper white. This style
destination white points. For may also be used with PostScript color
example, the bluish-white color management to affect CMYK data for
(gray) of a monitor is replaced simulation purposes.
by paper white. This style
avoids visible borders between
blank spaces and white objects.
Absolute Colorimetric - Situations when exact colors are needed and Absolute Colorimetric
Provides no white point visible borders are not distracting. This style
transformation between the may also be used with PostScript color
source and destination white management to affect CMYK data for
points. For example, the bluish- simulation purposes.
white color (gray) is not
replaced by paper white.
Fiery Command WorkStation 102
Managing color
The Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source option determines how RGB colors (as well as Lab and XYZ colors) are
converted to CMYK. This option defines the color spaces that are used by the Fiery Server to separate the RGB data
into CMYK values.
• When Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source is turned on, all RGB colors are first converted to the CMYK color
space defined by the CMYK/Grayscale Source print option before being converted to the CMYK color space of the
printer (as defined by the Output Profile print option). The result is a simulation of the RGB colors that would be
output from a printer with the characteristics defined by the CMYK/Grayscale Source profile.
With Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source, for example, if a high-quality ICC profile is available for another
printer, your printer can simulate the behavior of that other printer.
• When Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source is turned off, all RGB colors are converted directly to the CMYK color
space of the printer (as defined by the Output Profile print option).
The Spot Color Matching option provides automatic matching of spot colors in a job with their best CMYK
equivalents.
• When Spot Color Matching is turned on, the Fiery Server uses a built-in table to generate the closest CMYK
matches of spot colors that the copier/printer can produce. (New tables are generated automatically for each
output profile that you add to the Fiery Server.)
With Fiery Spot-On, the Fiery Server uses the CMYK matches determined through Fiery Command
WorkStation Spot Colors.
• When Spot Color Matching is turned off, the Fiery Server processes the spot color as CMYK data and uses
CMYK equivalents defined by the spot color manufacturer, such as PANTONE. These are the same CMYK
equivalents used by applications that include spot color libraries.
Note: A spot color that is not included in the built-in table is simulated using the alternate color that is provided in
the document.
For jobs that include spot colors, turn Spot Color Matching on unless you are printing proofs of process color press
simulations. In that case, turn Spot Color Matching off and select the appropriate CMYK/Grayscale Source setting.
When the Gray (RGB) option is turned on, any RGB color that has equal R, G, and B values is printed as K-only black
instead of CMYK black. Similarly, when Gray (CMYK) is turned on, any CMYK color where C, M, and Y are 0 (zero),
and K is any value is printed as K-only black instead of CMYK black.
You can turn on Gray (RGB) or Gray (CMYK) for either Text and Graphics or Text, Graphics, and Images. "Graphics"
refers to vector graphics. "Images" refers to bitmap images.
The following limitations apply:
• The Gray (RGB) and Gray (CMYK) options have no effect on a job that is sent as separations.
• If CMYK Processing Method is set to Pure Primaries, Gray (CMYK) does not affect the output.
• If CMYK Processing Method is set to Quick, Gray (CMYK) does not affect the output.
Fiery Command WorkStation 103
Managing color
• If Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source is turned on, Gray (RGB) is turned off. Likewise, if Gray (RGB) is turned on,
you cannot turn on Separate RGB/Lab to CMYK Source.
• If Black Text and Graphics is set to Pure Black On or Rich Black On, it takes precedence over Gray (RGB) and Gray
(CMYK) for 100% black text and graphics.
• If a gray is specified as a spot color, Gray (RGB) and Gray (CMYK) do not affect that gray.
The Black Text and Graphics option affects black text and vector graphics. When you set this option to Pure Black
On, the black generated by applications (RGB=0, 0, 0 or CMYK=0%, 0%, 0%, 100%) is printed using black only.
With Black Text and Graphics set to Pure Black On, black text and line art are not misregistered, since only one
colorant is used. This setting also eliminates blasting, which is an undesirable effect that occurs when excess
amounts of toner, combined with certain types of paper stock, cause objects to spread beyond their defined
boundaries.
For some jobs, we recommend setting Black Text and Graphics to Normal. For example, if a job includes gradient fills
that use black, the Normal setting gives the best result.
If you set Black Overprint to Text or Text/Graphics, Black Text and Graphics must be set to Pure Black On.
Note: Use Black Text and Graphics only when printing composites, not separations.
The following table describes the behavior of Black Text and Graphics with black defined in different color spaces.
Color Black Text and Graphics = Normal Black Text and Graphics = Pure Black
On or Rich Black On
RGB=0,0,0 (all other RGB Printed according to the definition for Printed as 100% K (Pure Black On) or 100%
values are unaffected by Black RGB=0,0,0 in the output profile. This may K plus 50% Cyan (Rich Black On) using
Text and Graphics) be a rich black (one that uses multiple black and cyan.
colorants) if the output profile specifies a
rich black, or K-only if the output profile
specifies K-only for RGB=0,0,0. The output
is affected by calibration.
Fiery Command WorkStation 104
Managing color
Color Black Text and Graphics = Normal Black Text and Graphics = Pure Black
On or Rich Black On
CMYK=0%,0%,0%,100% (all Printed as K-only or as a rich black using all Printed as 100% K (Pure Black On) or 100%
other CMYK values are colorants, depending on the CMYK/ K plus 50% Cyan (Rich Black On) using
unaffected by Black Text and Grayscale Source and CMYK/Grayscale black and cyan, regardless of the CMYK
Graphics) Processing Method settings. Source and CMYK Processing Method
settings.
If CMYK/Grayscale Processing Method is set
to Pure Primaries, or if CMYK/Grayscale
Source is set to Bypass Conversion,
CMYK=0%,0%,0%,100% prints as 100% K
and the amount of black is limited by the
CMYK/Grayscale Source profile and
calibration.
If CMYK/Grayscale Processing Method is set
to Quick, or if CMYK/Grayscale Source is set
to None, CMYK=0%,0%,0%,100% prints as
100% K and the amount of black is limited
by the CMYK/Grayscale Source profile and
calibration.
If CMYK/Grayscale Processing Method is set
to Full (Output GCR), CMYK=0%,0%,0%,
100% is printed as a rich black using all
colorants according to the output profile.
The output is affected by calibration.
If CMYK/Grayscale Processing Method is set
to Full (Source GCR), CMYK=0%,0%,0%,
100% is printed as a rich black using all
colorants according to the CMYK/Grayscale
Source profile. The output is affected by
calibration.
Spot colors (unaffected by Standard spot color processing Standard spot color processing
Black Text and Graphics)
Note: PostScript applications may convert elements defined as RGB=0, 0, 0 to four-color CMYK black before
sending the job to the Fiery Server. These elements are not affected by the Black Text and Graphics option.
Black overprint
The Black overprint option specifies whether black text, or black text and vector graphics (where black is defined as
RGB=0, 0, 0, or as CMYK=0%, 0%, 0%, 100%) print over colored backgrounds. If you turn off this option, black text,
or black text and graphics knock out colored backgrounds. Knocking out can create a white edge around objects, or a
"halo," caused by the misalignment of color plates.
Fiery Command WorkStation 105
Managing color
Note: You can set Black overprint only if Black text and graphics is set to Pure Black On
The Black overprint option has the following settings:
• Text - Black text overprints colored backgrounds, eliminating white gaps and reducing the halo effect from
misregistration of colors.
• Text/Graphics - Black text and graphics overprint colored backgrounds, eliminating white gaps and the halo
effect from misregistration of colors.
• Off - Black text and graphics knock out colored backgrounds.
Note: PostScript applications may perform their own black overprint conversions before printing.
An example of how you might use this setting is a page that contains black text on a light blue background. The
background blue is CMYK=40%, 30%, 0%, 0%. The black text is CMYK=0%, 0%, 0%, 100%.
• With Black overprint set to Text or Text/Graphics, the final text or graphic portions of the page are overprinted,
or combined with the underlying color. Black colors generated by applications (for example, RGB=0, 0, 0 or
CMYK=0%, 0%, 0%, 100%) are printed using black only. This means that black text and line art do not exhibit
halftone artifacts (as long as the printer is calibrated correctly). No transition in cyan and magenta occurs and
the quality of the output is improved, because it does not show artifacts near the edges of text.
• With Black overprint set to Off, the border of the text or graphic is on an edge that has cyan and magenta on one
side (outside the object) and black on the other side (inside the object). This transition may cause visible artifacts
due to the practical limitations of the printer.
Note: The reproduction of CMYK components is affected by the CMYK/Grayscale Source setting and calibration
when CMYK is not 0%, 0%, 0%, 100%.
Output profile
The Output profile print option specifies the output profile used to process a job. Color data in a print job is
converted to the color space of the printer, which is described by the output profile.
In addition, the calibration that is associated with the output profile is applied to the job before printing.
The Fiery Server includes one or more default output profiles, each created for a specific media type. You can also
import your own output profiles to the Fiery Server.
for Output profile and CMYK/Grayscale Device Link or RGB Device Link. In this case, the selected output profile is not
used for color management, since the device link profile is used.
Profiles
Profile Manager in Fiery Command WorkStation allows you to manage the ICC profiles that reside on the Fiery
Server. Color Editor (in Profile Manager) allows you to create a custom profile from an existing CMYK profile and
use the AutoGray feature to adjust the gray balance of output profiles.
Profile Manager also provides access to the custom Paper Simulation feature for CMYK source profiles if your Fiery
Server supports this feature.
The Fiery Server uses the following types of profiles for color management:
• An RGB source profile defines the source color space for RGB (and Lab) colors in a print job. Typical devices
using RGB profiles are monitors, scanners, and digital cameras. An RGB source profile enables the Fiery Server
to convert RGB colors in a print job to the CMYK color space of the printer accurately.
• A CMYK source profile defines the source color space for CMYK colors in a print job. Typical devices using
CMYK profiles are printing presses and digital printers. A CMYK source profile enables the Fiery Server to
convert CMYK colors in a print job to the CMYK color space of the printer accurately.
• An output profile describes the color characteristics of the printer when printing to a specific media type. An
output profile is associated with a calibration that describes the expected color output densities of the printer.
The output profile and its associated calibration are applied to all color data in a print job.
• A device link profile describes the conversion from a specific source color space to an output color space. With
device link profiles, the complete conversion from the source device to the destination device is defined, and the
Fiery Server does not calculate the conversion.
The Fiery Server supports two kinds of device link profiles: RGB source to CMYK destination and CMYK source
to CMYK destination.
A device link profile must be associated with a source profile setting (CMYK/Grayscale Device Link for a CMYK-
to-CMYK device link profile or RGB/Lab Device Link for an RGB-to-CMYK device link profile) and an Output
Profile setting, otherwise the device link profile cannot be selected for a job.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and then click Profiles.
2 In Profile Manager, click the profile to select it. The properties of the selected profile are shown on the right side
of the window.
Fiery Command WorkStation 107
Managing color
2 While pressing the Ctrl key, select the second profile (both profiles are selected).
3 Right-click either profile and select Compare Profiles.
Profile Inspector opens in a separate window. For more information, click the Help icon in Profile Inspector.
Import profiles
You can import a source profile (RGB or CMYK), an output profile, or a device link profile to the Fiery Server.
Note: On Windows, a profile must have a file name extension of .icc or .icm to be selectable for importing. On Mac
OS, a profile must have a file type of “profile.”
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, click Profiles and then click Import.
• Manage Custom Locations - Allows you to add or delete folders designated as custom locations. Custom
locations are displayed in the Location list.
• All - Selects all folders in the Location list.
• OS-installed folders are defined as follows.
Computer /Library/ColorSync/Profiles
User ~/Library/ColorSync/Profiles
Profiles in the selected folder are displayed and can be selected. Subfolders are included when you select an OS-
installed folder. Subfolders are not included when you select a custom location.
3 Select a profile.
• CMYK Source and Simulation - To use the profile as a CMYK source profile. Select if you want the Fiery Server
to simulate another printer or press standard.
• Output - To use the profile as an output profile. Select for a custom profile of your copier/printer.
5 Click Import.
6 If the Profile Settings dialog box is displayed, select settings for this profile and click OK.
You set the profile settings when the imported profile is a new profile (not a replacement of a profile already on
the Fiery Server).
Export profiles
You can export a profile from the Fiery Server as a backup measure or to use the profile with an ICC-aware
application such as Adobe Photoshop.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
3 Browse to the desired location on your computer and click Select Folder to save the profile.
If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you can use Fiery Printer Profiler to create an output
profile.
Note: You can also create an output profile by editing an existing output profile in Color Editor and saving it as a
new profile.
You can start Fiery Printer Profiler from Profile Manager in Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
Printer Profiler opens in a separate window. For more information about using Printer Profiler to create an output
profile, see the online Help for Printer Profiler.
Note: You can also start Fiery Printer Profiler from Command WorkStation Calibrator, after you create a new
calibration setting.
If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you can use Fiery Device Linker to create a device link
profile.
You can start Fiery Device Linker from Profile Manager in Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
Device Linker opens in a separate window. For more information about using Device Linker to create a device link
profile, see the online Help for Device Linker.
Delete profiles
You can delete profiles that are no longer needed. Deleting profiles also helps to free up disk space on the Fiery
Server. You cannot delete locked profiles.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, click Profiles, and select the profile.
2 Click Settings, set Label in Driver to Unassigned, and then click OK.
Note: Label in Driver is not available for models of Fiery Server. If this option does not appear, skip this step.
3 In the Profile Settings window, set the options as needed and click OK. The selections that are available depend on
the type of profile and the model of Fiery Server.
• Profile Description - A description that identifies the profile. The description cannot be changed if the profile is
locked.
• Label in Driver - A predefined name that the profile is associated with. If the printer driver does not have Two-
Way Communication enabled, you can still select this profile using the predefined name. The label of an RGB
source profile or CMYK source profile cannot be changed if the profile is locked.
• Media Type - One or more media settings that an output profile is associated with. These settings are used
when the output profile for a job is determined by its media settings (rather than set to a specific output
profile).
If Media Type is not shown, use Paper Catalog to configure media-defined profiles.
• Calibration - The calibration to associate with an output profile.
• CMYK Source Profile or RGB Source Profile - The source profile setting associated with a device link profile. A
device link profile is selected for a job by a specific combination of source profile and output profile settings. A
CMYK-to-CMYK device link profile has a CMYK Source Profile setting. An RGB-to-CMYK device link profile
has an RGB Source Profile setting .
Note: Edits made to a CMYK source profile do not apply when a device link profile associated with the CMYK
source profile is used.
• Output Profile - The output profile setting associated with a device link profile.
With Color Editor, you can adjust features such as brightness, CMYK density curves, target densities and gray
balance (for output profiles), and paper simulation (for CMYK source profiles).
Edits made with Color Editor are for printing with the Fiery Server only. They do not affect the profile if the profile is
used in another context.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
Note: If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is not installed on your computer, you can skip this step. Color Editor will open
automatically.
4 In Color Editor, adjust the density curves. For fine adjustments, work with only one or two colors at a time.
The curves on the graph map the input percentage to the output percentage for each of the four color channels
(C, M, Y, and K). The percentages refer to the size of the CMYK halftone dots.
• To show or hide the C, M, Y, or K curves, click the "eye" icon for each color.
• To bring a curve to the front, click its color bar, next to the "eye" icon.
• To adjust the brightness of the curves that are shown, use the plus and minus buttons.
• To adjust a curve, drag a point on the curve, click a point and type new numbers in the Input and Output
fields, or click a point and use the arrow keys to move it.
5 For output profiles: Optionally, if your Fiery Server stores the calibration target in the output profile, you can edit
the maximum densities of the calibration target (the D-Max values) for each color (C, M, Y, and K).
If the D-Max values are not shown, then your Fiery Server stores the calibration target separately from the output
profile. In this case, you can view and adjust the D-Max values in Calibrator.
Caution: Even if you can edit the maximum density values, we recommend that you only view them. A
calibration target represents the ideal values for calibration, and the output profile contains these values.
The calibration target should not be changed unnecessarily.
6 For output profiles: Optionally, adjust the gray balance of the output profile by clicking AutoGray.
7 For CMYK source profiles: Optionally, if the Fiery Server supports paper simulation, configure settings for white
point simulation by clicking Paper Simulation.
9 When you are finished, click Save and enter a description for the new profile.
Important: If you do not enter a new description, the edited profile overwrites the original. If you edit and
save a locked profile, you can only save it as a copy. A locked profile cannot be overwritten.
If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you can use Fiery Profile Editor to edit an output profile.
With Profile Editor, you can adjust global color features such as rendering intent and CMYK density curves, as well
as adjust specific hues, colors, or even a specific data point in the profile gamut.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and then click Profiles.
2 Select an output profile, click Edit, and then select Fiery Profile Editor.
For more information about using Fiery Profile Editor to edit a profile, click the Help icon in Profile Editor.
Fiery Command WorkStation 112
Managing color
You can print the comparison page provided by the Fiery Server. The comparison page shows a variety of images and
color patches printed with and without the profile edits.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
2 Select a profile and click Edit. If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, select Color Editor.
4 Select Comparison Page, select the desired settings for Paper Size and Input Tray, and click Print.
You can create a sample image to print as a test page. The sample image is a user-defined CALIB.PS file in the Hold
queue.
1 In a graphics application, create a file to be used as the sample image.
2 Save the sample image as a PostScript or Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file called CALIB.PS.
3 In Fiery Command WorkStation, import the file to the Hold queue of the Fiery Server.
4 In Job Center, double-click the CALIB.PS job and set the job properties for printing the page.
5 In Device Center, click the Resources tab, and then click Profiles.
6 Select a profile and click Edit. If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, select Color Editor.
Note: AutoGray is not available if the copier/printer does not have a built-in scanner.
2 Select an output profile and click Edit. If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, select Color
Editor.
4 Select the input tray to use for printing the measurement page and click Print. The Paper Size is automatically set
to LTR/A4.
6 Follow the on-screen directions for placing the grayscale strip and the AutoGray measurement page on the glass
(platen), and click Continue.
8 To accept the AutoGray adjustment and save the results, click Save.
Calibrating the Fiery Server ensures consistent and reliable color output. Calibration adjusts for variations in the
color output of the printer, which changes over time and under different printing conditions.
Calibrator versions
Fiery Command WorkStation offers two versions of Calibrator, for different versions of Fiery Server software. You
can find the Fiery System version in Fiery Command WorkStation, in Device Center on the General Info tab under
the General tab.
• System 8 or 9 (and any variants): This version of Calibrator is described in this Help.
• All other Fiery system versions: You can access Help by clicking the Help button in the Calibrator windows.
Calibrator workflow
You can calibrate the Fiery Server using Calibrator in Fiery Command WorkStation. Calibration requires you to
select a measurement method, select a calibration set, print a measurement page, measure the page, and apply the
measurement data to the Fiery Server.
You can calibrate the Fiery Server using different measurement methods. To find out which methods are supported
for your Fiery Server, see Color Printing, which is part of the user documentation set.
If the Fiery Server supports multiple calibrations, you can perform the calibration procedure for each one, using the
appropriate paper type in each case. In this case, the Fiery Server stores different measurement data for each
calibration. However, you may choose to calibrate one time for multiple paper types if the papers are very similar. In
this case, at the end of the calibration procedure, you can apply the same measurement data to selected calibrations
or all calibrations.
Changing a calibration has the potential to affect all jobs for all users, so consider limiting the number of people
authorized to perform calibration. By default, only users with Administrator privileges can access calibration.
Only one user at a time can use Calibrator. If you try to calibrate when another user is using Calibrator, an error
message is displayed.
Fiery Command WorkStation 114
Managing color
Note: To see the calibration associated with a particular output profile, check the profile settings. For a calibration to
have an effect, it must be associated with one or more output profiles.
Calibrator modes
Calibrator provides two modes: Standard and Expert. You can perform all essential calibration tasks in Standard
mode. Expert mode offers additional options to print a test page and to view measurement data.
• Print Pages - Enables you to see the effects of the new calibration in printed output. With the Print Pages option,
you can print Comparison Pages showing the results of the new measurements with any profile associated with
the currently selected calibration set. You can create a custom Comparison Page and save it as a PostScript or
Encapsulated PostScript (EPS) file called CALIB.PS. Next, print the file to the Hold queue of the Fiery print
controller. You can also create a CALIB.PS file by renaming any job in the Hold queue.
• View Measurements - Enables you to examine the measurement data. With the View Measurements option, you
can view the current set of measurements as a table or graph that shows both the measurements and the target
curves.
When more than one profile uses the same target, an additional menu called Plot Against is displayed in the upper-
right corner of the dialog box. It lists all output profiles that use that same calibration set. Selecting an output profile
from this menu displays the target curves associated with that profile. If each output profile contains a unique
calibration target, the curves displayed also change when you switch profiles.
Note: A measurement instrument can provide more accurate calibration than ColorCal can. Use a measurement
instrument, such as the ES-1000 spectrophotometer, if one is available.
Some models of Fiery Server support preparation of the scanner even if the grayscale strip is missing. In this case, the
Fiery Server uses the measurements from the previous calibration or, if the Fiery Server has never been calibrated, a
default set of measurements. However, for best results, use the grayscale strip.
Scanner preparation is optional. We recommend that you prepare the scanner after maintenance or service, or
whenever the copier/printer output has been altered.
For some models of Fiery Server, you must perform additional steps at the copier/printer. In this case, you can print
an instruction page in Calibrator that describes the additional steps.
Fiery Command WorkStation 115
Managing color
When you print the ColorCal measurement page, you can choose to prepare the scanner as well. You perform
scanner measurement using the grayscale strip, Color Control Patches strip, and ColorCal Scanner Page.
These instructions apply to Calibrator version 1.3. If you have Calibrator version 2.0, help is supplied with the
application.
3 Under Check Print Settings, select a calibration set, either by name or by the print settings associated with the
calibration set.
Note: If more than one calibration set is listed under Check Print Settings, select the calibration set associated
with the output profile you use most often.
• ColorCal Page - Prints either one of the 256 ColorCal patterns chosen at random or a specific pattern designed
for your copier/printer.
• Single Pattern - Prints the pattern you specify. Enter the pattern number in the Patch Page Number field. This
option is useful if you want to reprint the same pattern you have printed before.
Sorted patches are printed on the page in order of hue and saturation levels. Randomized patches are printed in
random order. Randomized patches can help to compensate for density inconsistencies on different areas of the
page.
6 If you want to perform scanner preparation, select Print scanner calibration page. If you want to skip scanner
preparation, clear Print scanner calibration page.
7 Click Print. Retrieve the ColorCal measurement page and, if printed, the ColorCal Scanner Page. If you did not
print the ColorCal Scanner Page, skip the rest of this procedure and proceed to calibrating the Fiery Server.
9 Place the grayscale strip, Color Control Patches strip, and ColorCal Scanner Page in the correct positions on the
glass (platen) as indicated on the ColorCal Scanner Page.
Place the grayscale strip face down on the glass (platen) so that it will be centered along the top edge of the
ColorCal Scanner Page. Then place the Color Scale strip face down on the glass (platen) so it is centered below
the grayscale strip, keeping a distance of 0.25 inch to 0.5 inch between the two strips. Finally, place the ColorCal
Scanner Page face down over the strips.
You perform ColorCal calibration using the grayscale strip and the ColorCal measurement page.
For this procedure, you must have just printed the ColorCal measurement page in Calibrator and, optionally,
prepared the scanner.
2 Place the grayscale strip face down on the glass (platen) along the top edge of the glass so that it is centered along
the top edge of the measurement page.
3 Place the ColorCal measurement page face down over the grayscale strip, as indicated on the ColorCal
measurement page. Make sure that the patches on the grayscale strip do not overlap the color patches. Close the
platen glass cover, being careful not to move the grayscale strip and color measurement page.
3 Under Check Print Settings, select a calibration set, either by name or by the print settings associated with the
calibration set.
Note: If more than one calibration set is listed under Check Print Settings, select the calibration set associated
with the output profile you use most often.
5 Select appropriate options for your measurement instrument and click Print to print the measurement page.
Sorted patches are printed on the page in order of hue and saturation levels. Randomized patches are printed in
random order. Randomized patches can help to compensate for density inconsistencies on different areas of the
page.
6 Under Get Measurements, click Measure and select the options that match the printed measurement page.
7 Click Measure.
Note: The serial numbers of the ES-1000 and the cradle must match for accurate ES-1000 calibration.
Fiery Command WorkStation 117
Managing color
9 Click OK and follow the instructions for measuring the strips (in the Status field of the Measurements dialog box).
10 For a more accurate measurement, place several sheets of plain white paper beneath the measurement page or
use a backer board if it is available. The extra sheets block underlying colors from being read by the instrument.
11 Orient the measurement page so that strips are horizontal and the scan direction (indicated by the arrows at the
beginning of each strip) is left to right.
12 Hold the ES-1000 with its length perpendicular to the scan direction, and place the tip of the sensor on the white
space at the start of the specified color.
13 Press and hold the ES-1000 button and wait for a beep or wait for the background color in the dialog box to
change from green to white.
Note: To hear a beep with a Windows computer, you must install a sound card and speaker(s). You may have to
turn up the volume on your computer to hear the beep.
14 After you hear a beep or see the dialog box background color change, slide the ES-1000 at a slow but consistent
pace across the strip. (Take about five seconds to slide the length of the strip.)
15 Release the button when all the patches in the strip have been measured and you reach the white space at the end
of the strip.
When a strip is measured successfully, the dialog box background color changes to green, and the cross hair
moves to the next color. If the strip is not measured successfully, the dialog box background color changes to red,
and a message directs you to try again.
16 Repeat for all the strips in the order indicated on the screen.
17 When all the patches have been read successfully, click Accept.
3 Under Check Print Settings, select a calibration set, either by name or by the print settings associated with the
calibration set.
Note: If more than one calibration set is listed under Check Print Settings, select the calibration set associated
with the output profile you use most often.
5 Select appropriate options for your measurement instrument and click Print to print the measurement page.
Sorted patches are printed on the page in order of hue and saturation levels. Randomized patches are printed in
random order. Randomized patches can help to compensate for density inconsistencies on different areas of the
page.
Fiery Command WorkStation 118
Managing color
6 Under Get Measurements, click Measure and select the options that match the printed measurement page.
7 Click Measure.
9 Click OK and follow the instructions for measuring the strips (in the Status field of the Measurements dialog box).
10 For a more accurate measurement, place several sheets of plain white paper beneath the measurement page or
use a backer board if it is available. The extra sheets block underlying colors from being read by the instrument.
11 Orient the measurement page so that strips are horizontal and the scan direction (indicated by the arrows at the
beginning of each strip) is left to right.
12 Hold the Eye-One with its length perpendicular to the scan direction, and place the tip of the sensor in the white
space at the start of the specified color.
13 Press and hold the Eye-One button and wait for a beep or wait for the background color in the dialog box to
change from green to white.
Note: To hear a beep with a Windows computer, you must install a sound card and speaker(s). You may have to
turn up the volume on your computer to hear the beep.
14 After you hear a beep or see the dialog box background color change, slide the Eye-One at a slow but consistent
pace across the strip. (Take about five seconds to slide the length of the strip.)
15 Release the button when all the patches in the strip have been measured and you reach the white space at the end
of the strip.
When a strip is measured successfully, the dialog box background color changes to green, and the cross hair
moves to the next color. If the strip is not measured successfully, the dialog box background color changes to red,
and a message directs you to try again.
16 Repeat for all the strips in the order indicated on the screen.
17 When all the patches have been read successfully, click Accept.
• Selecting this option affects the calibration data for all calibration sets and therefore the output from all output
profiles will also change. Be sure that this option is appropriate for all output profiles. For best results, each
type of media should have its own calibration data.
• Clearing this option allows you to apply the current calibration to a subset of the calibration sets on the Fiery
Server. Specify the calibration sets by clicking Customize next to Apply to All Calibration Sets.
Note: If any of the selected calibration sets are not associated with an output profile, you receive a warning but
can choose to apply the measurements to that calibration set anyway.
To create a custom calibration set, you copy an existing calibration set and edit it.
1 In Calibrator, under Calibration Set, click the list and select Manage.
3 Under Calibration Page, type a new description for Recommended Paper, select the setting(s) associated with the
paper, and click Save.
The Recommended Paper description and settings are displayed when you print the measurement page for
calibration, to remind you to load the correct paper.
Note: The settings for your new calibration set are copied from the original calibration set, so you only need to
change the settings that are different.
4 Type a new name for the calibration set and select an output profile to associate it with.
Use a name that describes the paper name, weight, and type plus any other specific printing conditions (for
example, halftone or gloss settings). The name can have a maximum of 70 characters.
A copy of the selected output profile will be created and associated with the new calibration set. The copy has the
name of the calibration set appended to it.
5 Click OK.
The new calibration set is added.
Fiery Command WorkStation 120
Managing color
When you delete a custom calibration set, the output profile associated with it is not deleted. The profile is
automatically associated with another calibration set.
1 In Calibrator, under Calibration Set, click the list and select Manage.
2 Select the calibration set, click Delete, and then click OK.
A message indicates that the output profile associated with the deleted calibration set will be associated with a
different calibration set after the deletion.
If you do not need the output profile after deleting the calibration set (for example, because the profile is just a
copy of another output profile that was created when you created the calibration set), you can delete the profile.
Important: Clicking Cancel does not undo the deletion. The calibration set is deleted when you click OK.
• If you want to restore the default measurements to all calibration sets, select Apply to All Calibration Sets
• If you want to restore the default measurements to particular calibration sets, deselect Apply to All Calibration
Sets, click Customize, and select the calibration sets..
3 Click OK to confirm.
The output of a printer changes over time and under different printing conditions. Calibration helps to ensure
consistent and reliable output.
Calibration measures current output densities and then adjusts print jobs to achieve the desired output densities (the
calibration target or calibration goal). The calibration applied to a job is associated with the particular output profile
that is used for the job.
Changing calibration may affect all jobs for all users, so try to limit the number of people authorized to perform
calibration.
Only one user at a time can use Calibrator. If you try to calibrate when another user is using Calibrator, an error
message appears.
Fiery Command WorkStation offers two versions of Calibrator, for different versions of Fiery Server software. You
can find the Fiery System version in Fiery Command WorkStation, in Device Center on the General Info tab under
the General tab. For System 10 and later, you can access this Help by clicking the Help button in the Calibrator
windows
Fiery Command WorkStation 121
Managing color
Calibration workflow
When you calibrate a Fiery Server, you perform the following tasks.
• Print a calibration page, which contains patches of various colors (or shades of gray, for black-and-white
printers) in a specific layout. You use this page to measure the current output of the printer.
The output of the printer changes with time and usage. For the most current data, always measure a newly
printed calibration page.
• Measure the color values of the patches on the calibration page using a spectrophotometer or ColorCal.
Note: For black-and-white printers, ColorCal is not supported as a measurement method.
• Apply the measurements.
The measurement data is saved with the specific calibration setting. When you print a job with the calibration
setting, the measurement data is used to calculate the calibration adjustment that is needed to produce the
desired output (the calibration target).
Start Calibrator
How you start Calibrator depends on what you want to do.
1 To calibrate for any calibration setting on the Fiery Server, do one of the following:
• For color printers, if the calibration setting that you want is not selectable, it is probably because you started
calibration for a selected job. When you start calibration for a specific job, only the calibration setting that is used
to print the job is shown.
The recommended paper and the date and time of the most recent calibration measurements associated with the
selected calibration setting are displayed. If no date and time are given, the Fiery Server has not been calibrated
(for this calibration setting).
• Be sure the paper source contains paper that is appropriate for the calibration setting. If a warning appears under
the Paper Source setting, it might be because the paper source does not match the calibration setting. You can
either select a different calibration setting or a different paper source.
• For color printers. select a calibration setting in the Calibrate for list.
• Click the desired paper source in the Paper source list.
• Click a method in the Measurement method list.
2 Click Continue to print the calibration page and proceed to measurement
• EFI ES-1000
• EFI ES-2000
• X-Rite i1Pro
• X-Rite i1Pro2
Other types of measurement instruments may be supported by the printer connected to the Fiery Server.
When the EFI ES-2000 or X-Rite i1Pro2 is used in ES-1000 compatibility mode, its indicator lights may not operate.
On-screen messages indicate the state of the spectrophotometer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 123
Managing color
1 After printing the calibration page, place the spectrophotometer in its cradle.
If the calibration is successful, you can proceed to measure the calibration page.
You use the spectrophotometer to measure color patches by scanning each strip of patches in order.
When a strip is scanned successfully, the display indicator is green, and the arrow in the display moves to the next
strip. If the strip is not scanned successfully, the display indicator is red, and a message directs you to try again.
1 For more accurate measurement, place several sheets of plain white paper beneath the calibration page or use a
backup board if it is available.
2 Orient the calibration page so that strips are horizontal and the scan direction (indicated by the arrow at the
beginning of the strip shown in the display or on the calibration page) is left to right.
3 Hold the spectrophotometer with its length perpendicular to the scan direction, and place the tip of the sample
aperture on the white space at the start of the specified strip.
4 Press and hold the spectrophotometer button and wait for a signal (an indication on the display or a sound).
5 After you see or hear the signal, slide the spectrophotometer at a slow but consistent pace across the strip.
7 Release the button when all the patches in the strip have been scanned and you reach the white space at the end
of the strip.
8 Repeat for all the strips in the order indicated on the display.
For black-and-white printers, there is a single strip.
9 When all the strips have been scanned successfully, click Continue to view the measurement results.
Note: A measurement instrument can provide more accurate calibration than ColorCal can. Use a measurement
instrument, such as a spectrophotometer, if one is available.
ColorCal measurement consists of these tasks:
When you prepare the scanner for ColorCal, you use the scanner to measure patches on a color control patches
strip, a gray scale strip, and the ColorCal Scanner page that you printed. The color control patches and gray scale
strips are included in the customer media pack that came with your Fiery Server.
Scanner preparation is optional, but we recommend that you prepare the scanner after maintenance or service, or
whenever the printer output has been altered.
• Scanner preparation is enabled for ColorCal calibration by default. You can disable scanner preparation for
ColorCal calibration by clearing the Prepare scanner for ColorCal calibration checkbox in Preferences.
• When you perform ColorCal calibration, you can skip scanner preparation and go directly to measurement by
clicking Skip.
Note: Some types of Fiery Server support the preparation of the scanner even if the gray scale strip is missing. In this
case, the Fiery Server uses the measurements from the previous scanner preparation or, if this is the first ColorCal
calibration, a default set of measurements. However, for best results, prepare the scanner using a gray scale strip.
1 Place the gray scale strip, color control patches strip, and ColorCal Scanner page in the correct positions on the
glass (platen) as indicated in the instructions displayed on the screen.
a) Place the gray scale strip face down on the glass (platen) so that it will be centered along the top edge of the
ColorCal Scanner page.
b) Place the color control patches strip face down on the glass (platen) so it is centered below the gray scale strip,
keeping a distance of 0.25 inch to 0.5 inch (0.635 cm to 1.27 cm) between the two strips.
c) Finally, place the ColorCal Scanner page face down over the strips.
When you measure color patches in ColorCal, use the gray scale strip along with the ColorCal calibration page that
you printed. The gray scale strip is included in the customer media pack that came with your Fiery Server.
Measure the ColorCal calibration page after you prepare the scanner, unless you skipped scanner preparation.
1 If you have just prepared the scanner, remove the ColorCal Scanner page and the color control patches strip.
Fiery Command WorkStation 125
Managing color
2 Place the gray scale strip face down on the glass (platen). Place the strip along the top edge of the glass (platen)
and center it along the top edge of the calibration page.
3 Place the ColorCal Calibration page face down over the gray scale strip.
Make sure that the patches on the gray scale strip do not overlap the color patches on the ColorCal Calibration
page.
4 Close the platen glass cover, being careful not to move the gray scale strip and ColorCal Calibration page.
1 In the Calibrator main window, select Load measurements from file from the Measurement method list.
A specific file format is used to specify the Status T density measurements of a patch page for importing CMYK data
into Calibrator. The format has a number of requirements.
1 After you have successfully measured the calibration page or imported measurements from a file, click View
Measurements.
2 To hide or show curves, click the icon next to the appropriate label:
Visual difference
For color measurements, the visual difference percentage is a convenient way to evaluate the calibration accuracy.
Measurement data is displayed in paper relative density units (Status T). The Fiery Server calculates the visual
difference percentage using the Murray-Davies formula, which takes into account the exponential nature of density
measurements.
If the measured maximum density is less than the target maximum density, it means that the printer is currently
performing lower than expected using this calibration setting. A printed output at 100% of this colorant does not
result in the maximum density that this type of printer is expected to print. This situation is acceptable in many
proofing situations, because simulated CMYK color spaces typically do not require the maximum density that the
printer is capable of.
If the measured maximum density is more than the target maximum density, it means that the printer is currently
performing higher than expected using this calibration setting. To meet the calibration target, the Fiery Server does
not need to specify 100% of the colorant. However, the full gamut of the printer is not being used.
Fiery Command WorkStation 127
Managing color
An application such as Adobe Photoshop uses units of percentage from 0% (paper white) to 100% (maximum
density). Assuming the output profile used in Adobe Photoshop matches the calibrated state of the Fiery Server, a
visual difference of -5% for cyan means that the printer cannot produce the cyan color values specified in Adobe
Photoshop between 95% and 100%. A visual difference of +5% for cyan means that the printer can produce all the
cyan color values specified in Adobe Photoshop, and could produce up to 5% denser cyan values as well.
For color printers, you can print a test page that shows a side-by-side comparison of an image that was printed using
a particular calibration setting and the same image that was printed using the default calibration setting.
1 In Command Workstation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
Test page
For color printers, the test page lets you compare the current calibration data with the default calibration data for the
Fiery Server. The default calibration data is either the factory default data (for factory-supplied calibration settings)
or the initial measurement data (for custom calibration settings).
The test page contains color bars and images printed with the calibration data you are evaluating. There are two
versions of each image. The upper version shows the image printed with the default calibration data and the lower
version shows the image printed with the calibration data you are evaluating.
The color bars show a gradation from highlight to shadow for each colorant. The gradations should be smooth,
without sudden shifts in density, with the exception of the 100% K patch, which can appear darker as a result of the
black processing in color management.
If the test page does not appear satisfactory, it might be because the output profile associated with the calibration
setting is not appropriate for the paper and print settings.
4 Browse to the file location, change the file name if desired, and click Save.
Fiery Command WorkStation 128
Managing color
Calibrator preferences
The settings in the Preferences window affect various aspects of the calibration procedure. You can set the default
calibration method and patch layout, the calibration time limit (expiration), and the default profiling method and
patch layout.
For color printers, you can set the default measurement method and patch layout. The patch layouts that are
available for printing the calibration page vary by patch order and number of patches.
A greater number of patches yields more measurement data, which may produce better results. However, more
patches take longer to measure.
• Sorted patches are printed on the page in the order of their hue and saturation levels.
• Random , Randomized, or Unsorted patches are printed on the page in random order, to help compensate for
density inconsistencies on different areas of the page.
• If the Fixed Pattern patch layout is available for ColorCal on your Fiery Server, it prints the color patches in a
randomized pattern that you can specify by number. This layout is useful if you want to reprint the same pattern
that you have printed before.
If you select ColorCal as the default calibration method, you can require scanner preparation by default before
calibrating the Fiery Server.
We recommend that you prepare the scanner after maintenance or service, or whenever the printer output has been
altered. If you do not select the Prepare scanner for ColorCal calibration option in Preferences, scanner preparation is
skipped.
Note: Scanner preparation affects ColorCal only. It does not prepare the printer for other types of scanning.
If you set a time limit for a calibration, an outdated calibration results in status messages in Fiery Command
WorkStation and can cause a job to be suspended.
Fiery Command WorkStation displays a warning (yellow) for the job in the Job Center when the calibration will be
outdated within 30 minutes, and an error (red) when the calibration is outdated.
If the calibration of a job is outdated, the Fiery Server can suspend the job when you try to print it. The suspended
job is not printed but remains in the Printing queue in a suspended state.
The calibration status is checked just before the job is sent to print. If the calibration becomes outdated while a job is
printing, the job will not be suspended. We recommend that you calibrate before printing a long job to minimize the
possibility of the calibration becoming outdated while the job is printing.
If you double-click the suspended job, you can do one of the following:
• Calibrate the Fiery Server for the job's calibration setting(s). After you update the calibration measurements,
select the suspended job and print it.
• Continue printing the job using the outdated measurement data. Select this option if output consistency is not
important for this job.
Fiery Command WorkStation 130
Managing color
• Jobs submitted from an application using the Fiery PostScript printer driver or Fiery VUE.
• Imported PDF and TIFF jobs.
• Jobs that have been processed (including processed VPS and VIPP jobs).
The Fiery Server cannot determine if the calibration is outdated and therefore will not suspend the following types of
jobs:
You can set a calibration time limit and set whether Command Workstation suspends the job if calibration has
expired.
• In the Calibration Preferences dialog box, do any of the following:
• To set an expiration time, select Set time limit and display status in Job Center and specify a time interval (1-23
hours or 1-200 days).
• To enable job suspension, select Suspend printing when calibration expires.
If the Fiery Server supports color printing and Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you have the
option to create a custom output profile after you create a custom calibration setting. You can set the default
measurement method and patch layout for Printer Profiler.
The list of measurement methods and the list of available patch layouts are provided by Fiery Color Profiler Suite.
ColorCal is not available as a measurement method for profiling. It does not provide enough accuracy.
Calibration settings
If your Fiery Server supports color printing, you can access one or more calibration settings. Typically, calibration
settings and output profiles are appropriate for specific paper and printing conditions. A calibration setting can be
associated with more than one output profile.
To find out which calibration setting is associated with a particular output profile, check the profile settings in
Command WorkStation.
Fiery Command WorkStation 131
Managing color
You can view the job properties associated with a calibration setting. The calibration setting is appropriate for
printing jobs that have the same job properties. These job properties are used to print the calibration page.
The Job Properties window displays all the print settings associated with the calibration setting, whether related to
calibration or not. The settings are specified when the calibration setting is created. You cannot modify the settings
of an existing calibration setting.
Many print settings have no effect on calibration. However, print settings that affect image quality (such as the
halftone screen or resolution) do affect calibration.
Settings in the Color tab of the Job Properties window are ignored when printing the calibration page.
1 In Command Workstation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
Measurement data is saved when you calibrate for a specific calibration setting. The measurement data can be
displayed on a graph with the calibration target data, so that you can see how closely the measured printer output
matches the calibration target.
1 In Command Workstation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
When you create a custom calibration setting, the spectrophotometer is automatically selected as the measurement
method. ColorCal is not available as a method because it does not use a colorimetric instrument.
You must have Administrator privileges to create a custom calibration setting.
After you create a new calibration setting, you associate it with an output profile. Depending on your paper, a new
calibration setting may not give satisfactory results when used with an existing output profile. If it does not, we
recommend that you create a new, custom output profile based on your paper.
• If you select an existing profile, select the profile for the paper that is the most similar to your paper. A copy of
this profile with the same name as the calibration setting is created, and the existing calibration target (goal) of
the profile is changed to a new target calculated using the calibration measurements. The new calibration setting
is associated with this profile.
• If you create a new, custom output profile, a profiling measurement page is printed. You measure the page using
Printer Profiler in Fiery Color Profiler Suite, and the resulting profile is imported to the Fiery Server and
associated with your new calibration setting.
Fiery Command WorkStation 132
Managing color
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
3 Select the calibration setting that best matches your paper or select Server default, and click OK.
6 (Optional) For Paper reorder number, type the product ID number for your paper.
This information can usually be found on the paper packaging. To find out more about a recommended paper,
perform an Internet search on the paper reorder number.
9 If you want to change one or more print settings, click Properties, make the changes, and then click OK.
Do not select any settings (such as finishing options) that will make your calibration page unmeasurable.
10 Click Continue.
11 Select the Paper Source for printing the calibration page and click Continue.
13 To print a test page, click View Measurements, and then click Test Print.
You can print a test page to help you decide whether to associate the calibration setting with an existing output
profile or create a new output profile.
14 Do one of the following to associate the new calibration setting with an output profile:
• Select an output profile from the list of profiles that reside on the Fiery Server.
• If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, click Create New Profile to create a new, custom
output profile using Fiery Color Profiler Suite.
The maximum densities of the calibration target (D-Max values) that is associated with a specific calibration setting
are editable when you create the calibration setting. For each colorant (C, M, Y, and K), you can type a new value, or
you can import a calibration target from a file.
The edited target data replaces the target data currently associated with this calibration setting when you apply the
current measurement data.
Import the target data from a file if you have an existing profile and calibration target from another Fiery Server that
you want to use on this Fiery Server. For best results, however, use profiles and calibration data that have been
created specifically for this Fiery Server and its printer.
Even though you can edit the maximum density values, we recommend that you do so with caution. A calibration
target represents the ideal values for calibration and should not be changed unnecessarily.
Fiery Command WorkStation 133
Managing color
1 After you have successfully measured the calibration page for the new calibration setting, click View
Measurements.
You can edit the basic information of a custom calibration setting. You cannot edit a factory-supplied calibration
setting.
Job properties (print settings) cannot be edited since any measurement data saved with the calibration setting would
become invalid. To edit the job properties of a calibration setting, create a new calibration setting based on the
existing one.
You must have Administrator privileges to edit a custom calibration setting.
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
• Name - Type a name that describes the paper name, weight, and type plus any other specific printing
conditions (for example, halftone or gloss settings). The name can have a maximum of 70 characters.
• Recommended paper - Type the name of your paper.
• Paper reorder number - Type the product ID number for your paper. This information can usually be found on
the paper packaging.
• Comment - (Optional) Type additional descriptive information. This information appears in the list of
calibration settings available on the Fiery Server.
You can delete a custom calibration setting if it is not associated with the default output profile. You cannot delete a
factory-supplied calibration setting.
You must have Administrator privileges to delete a custom calibration setting.
1 In Command Workstation Device Center, click the General tab, click Tools, and then click Manage under
Calibrate.
Image enhancement
The Fiery Server supports two methods of image enhancement to adjust tone, color, sharpness, and red-eye in
images.
• Use the Apply image enhancement print option to make simple, quick adjustments that do not require visual
inspection before printing.
• Use Image Enhance Visual Editor (IEVE) to make specific adjustments that require fine-tuning and visual
inspection before printing.
Although IEVE and Apply image enhancement are independent of each other, you should not use IEVE and Apply
image enhancement to adjust images in a job at the same time. Using both at the same time applies settings from
both, which may have unexpected effects on the appearance and quality of images.
1 In Device Center, click the Workflows tab and click Image Enhance.
2 Click Edit.
3 Click Custom Settings, modify the settings, and then click OK.
• Shadows & Highlights - Enables the Auto Correction, Shadows, and Highlights controls.
If Auto Correction is selected, the Fiery Server analyzes each image and attempts to correct for shadows that
are too dark and highlights that are too light. You can specify Shadows and Highlights enhancements manually
if you clear the Auto Correction option first.
• Sharpness - Enables the Skin Sharpness and Non-skin Sharpness controls.
The Skin Sharpness control affects flesh tones in an image. The Non-skin Sharpness control affects the other
colors in the image. The range for each control is from -100 (softening) to 100 (sharpening).
• Red-Eye Correction - Red-eye is the condition in which a light source, usually a flash built into a camera,
reflects from the retina in the subject's eye, causing a red pupil in the photo.
If Red-Eye Correction is selected, the Fiery Server analyzes the image and attempts to identify and correct the
red-eye condition. You can adjust the size of the correction area using the Region control, where 100
corresponds to just the area of the red pupil.
Limitations
• Edit a job in IEVE on one client computer at a time. Editing on multiple client computers can give unexpected
results.
• If you edit and save a job in IEVE and then open it in an earlier version of IEVE, some edits may not appear or
may be removed.
• IEVE is limited to opening files 100 pages or less.
• IEVE is limited to extracting 50 images from a single page.
• If the edges of an image are not at right angles to the other edges of that image (for example, like the edges of a
square or rectangle) and the edges of the page, the image cannot be selected for editing. This includes images
rotated at non-right angles from the base of the page and images that are not square or rectangular.
You open Image Enhance Visual Editor (IEVE) from jobs in Fiery Command WorkStation.
• In the Hold queue, right-click the job and then select Image Enhance Visual Editor.
Fiery Command WorkStation 136
Managing color
In some cases, a large job may not open or display correctly if Image Enhance Visual Editor (IEVE) is installed on the
Fiery Server that also has a FACI kit installed. Increasing the hard disk space available on the Fiery Server may
correct this problem.
1 Close IEVE and Fiery Command WorkStation.
2 Create a folder for the temporary files on the E: drive. Name the folder Temp.
5 In the System Properties dialog box, click the Advanced tab. Click Environment Variables.
6 In the Environment Variables dialog box, at the top, select the TEMP variable. Click Edit.
7 In the Edit User Variable dialog box, enter the path to the Temp folder you created in step 2 on page 136. Click
OK.
8 Repeat steps 6-7 on page 136 for the TMP variable. Use the same path as in step 7 on page 136.
Note: The next time you open a large job, IEVE will use this temporary folder and the job should render correctly.
Adjusting an image
You can adjust images using the features in the Preview tab or the Split tab in the Adjustments pane.
You can either:
Adjust tone
Tone settings affect the tone levels (contrast and brightness) as well as the highlights and shadows of an image. If
details in highlight or shadow areas are hard to see because of exposure or lighting problems, you can use
Highlights and Shadows settings to make them more visible.
You can adjust tone characteristics individually. For the Highlights and Shadows settings, you can enter a value
from 0 to 100 and for all other settings, you can enter a value from -100 to 100.
• Set any of the following in the Tone section of the Adjustments pane:
• Auto (Levels) - Analyzes the image and automatically sets the tone levels to achieve the best appearance.
This adjustment corrects for underexposure and overexposure.
If the image is already optimized, or nearly optimized, you may not notice a difference. After you enable
Auto, you can still fine-tune Highlight and Shadows settings, if desired.
• Brightness - Increases or decreases the brightness of an image.
• Contrast - Increases or decreases the contrast of an image.
• Definition - Increases or decreases the amount of definition (detail) in an image without affecting the
amount of contrast in the image.
• Auto (Highlights & Shadows) - Calculates optimal highlight and shadows level and automatically applies
them to the image, updating the Highlights and Shadows settings.
If the image is already optimized, or nearly optimized, you may not notice a difference. After you enable
Auto, you can still fine-tune Highlights and Shadows settings, if desired.
• Highlights - Enhances the details in highlighted portions of an image to make them more visible.
• Shadows - Enhances the details in areas of shadow to make them more visible.
Adjust color
If you have optimized the tone reproduction, typically the only remaining color problem is a color cast—an
imbalance in the colors of the image. Color settings affect the overall color balance and saturation.
• Temperature - Sets the blue-yellow color balance (the b channel in Lab color space).
• Tint - Sets the red-green color balance (the a channel in Lab color space).
• Saturation - Increases or decreases the saturation of all colors in an image.
Fiery Command WorkStation 138
Managing color
• Fleshtone Saturation - Increases or decreases the saturation of only fleshtones in an image, rather than the
saturation of the entire image.
• Lock (Saturation) - When selected, increasing or decreasing a Saturation setting increases or decreases
other Saturation settings the same amount. For example, if Saturation is 10, Fleshtone Saturation is 20,
and the lock is on, then increasing Saturation to 15 increases Fleshtone Saturation to 25 at the same time.
• Auto (Color Balance) - Automatically corrects the color balance (temperature and tint) of the image to
achieve the best appearance.
If the image is already optimized, or nearly optimized, you may not notice a difference. After you enable
Auto, you can still fine-tune Color Balance settings, if desired.
Adjust sharpness
You can improve a blurry image by increasing sharpness or soften an image by decreasing sharpness. Softening
is sometimes desired for special effects and in portraits.
Red-Eye Correction analyzes the image and attempts to identify and correct red-eye. You can select an area to
correct and adjust the area by increasing or decreasing its tolerance.
The Tolerance setting applies to all Red-Eye Correction areas in an image.
• To delete a Red-Eye Correction area, click the red X at the corner of the marquee.
• To create a Red-Eye Correction area manually, make sure Red-Eye Correction is On and then click and drag
in the image to create a marquee.
• To resize a Red-Eye Correction area, drag a handle on the marquee.
4 If you want to change the degree of Red-Eye Correction, increase or decrease the Tolerance to a value that
just eliminates the red eye:
Note: Red-Eye Correction is still applied when the marquees are hidden.
Saving edits has different results for PDF and PostScript jobs.
• If you edit and save a PDF job, your adjustments are preserved in the saved job. If you close IEVE and
subsequently open the same PDF job, the controls are set as you saved them. You can manually fine-tune the
settings or undo any changes that did not have the desired effect.
• If you edit and save a PostScript job, the edits are incorporated into the job and can no longer be undone. If you
close IEVE and subsequently open the same job in IEVE, the images appear as edited but all controls are at their
default settings.
Presets
You can apply presets to one or more pages or to one or more images on a page or multiple pages.
These predefined presets are available:
• Automatic - Enables Auto for Levels, Highlights & Shadows, and Color Balance, and sets Definition, Saturation,
Fleshtone Saturation, Sharpness, and Fleshtone Sharpness to optimal levels.
• No Correction - Sets all controls to their original, unmodified settings and returns images to their original state.
For PDF files, all adjustments to the selected images are removed. For PostScript files, all adjustments to the
selected images made since the last time you saved the file are removed.
Fiery Command WorkStation 140
Managing color
You can also create custom presets by saving a set of settings as a preset.
Custom presets can be deleted, but you cannot delete the Automatic and No Correction presets. If you delete a
custom preset for a job that is open, IEVE applies the No Correction preset. Deleting a preset does not affect the
settings of images that you already applied the preset to.
Use presets
You can create and apply presets. You can also delete custom presets, but you cannot delete the Automatic and
No Correction presets. Deleting a preset does not affect settings of images that already have the preset applied.
Create a preset
You can create a preset using existing settings or create your own settings.
1 Either select an image that already has the settings you want to save or make the desired adjustments to the
selected image.
Delete a preset
The preset is deleted from the Preset list, and the No Correction preset is applied to the current image.
1 In the Preset list, choose the preset to delete.
Note: The preset is deleted and the No Corrections preset is applied to the current image.
Reset an image
Applying the No Correction preset resets images to their original state. For PDF files, all adjustments to the
selected images are removed. For PostScript files, all adjustments to the selected images made since the last time
you saved the file are removed.
1 Select the image.
Spot colors
The Spot Colors feature is a spot color (named color) manager in Fiery Command WorkStation that allows you to
edit spot color definitions on the Fiery Server and create custom spot color definitions. Spot Colors is a part of the
Spot-On feature. If Spot-On is available for your Fiery Server and is enabled, you can adjust and manage lists of spot
colors and their CMYK equivalents.
Spot Colors comes pre-loaded with libraries of named colors such as those from PANTONE, HKS, TOYO, and DIC.
The spot color libraries store the original colors with their device-independent definitions (Lab values). For each
output profile on the Fiery Server, Spot Colors computes the best available CMYK reproduction of each spot color.
Each time a new profile is generated or updated, Spot Colors automatically recalculates the best CMYK equivalents.
You can create a list of “substitute” colors. These are colors that, when called for in a document by their RGB or
CMYK values, are substituted with a different color having the CMYK values from the Spot Colors color definition.
This permits exact color control and overrides individual RGB and CMYK colors.
If Two-Color Print Mapping is available for your Fiery Server, and is enabled, Spot Colors also allows you to assign
spot colors and process colors to the generic colors that are used in a job. The Two-Color Print Mapping feature is
designed for print shop operators to simulate a two-color press. You can print a two-color job to a two-color device
by mapping the colors in a job to the colors that are already created on the device.
Fiery Command WorkStation 142
Managing color
By default, the Fiery Server has several PANTONE color groups, including PANTONE Goe, and a System color
group. It might have the DIC, HKS, and TOYO color groups as well. These standard groups are locked. You cannot
delete, rename, or export a locked group, and you cannot add, rename, or delete the spot colors in a locked group or
change the priority order of the spot colors.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
2 If Output Profile appears at the top of the Spot Colors window, select the output profile from the list.
3 If Properties appears at the top of the Spot Colors window, click Properties, select the print settings for the job
that will use the edited spot colors, and click OK.
The print settings in the Properties window are the current default settings on the Fiery Server.
Note: Print settings that are not related to color management are ignored. In the case of a Mixed Media job, the
print settings for the first page are used.
The Spot Colors window is updated with the Paper Source and Output Profile settings.
Note: You cannot change the order of colors within a locked color group.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
Fiery Command WorkStation 143
Managing color
2 Click Find.
3 Type all or part of the spot color name and click Next.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
• To edit the CMYK percentage values directly, click in the C, M, Y, or K field and type a new value. Use the Tab
key to move from one field to the next. The new color is displayed next to Current Pick.
• To select a new color visually, click a color patch in the lower area of the dialog box.
The selected color becomes the new Current Pick and is displayed in the center patch of the center cluster.
Neighboring patches show updated hue variations from the center patch, in the hue directions indicated by the
colored arrows. The left and right clusters show variations of saturation or brightness (whichever is selected for
Tuning Mode) from the center cluster. To control the degree of variation in the neighboring patches, move the
slider closer to Fine (for smaller variation) or Coarse (for larger variation). To see the CMYK value of any patch
displayed under Toner Usage, move the cursor over the patch.
Note: When you select certain colors, an exclamation point icon may appear in the upper-right corner of the
dialog box. This icon indicates that one or more colorants have reached their maximum values.
• To select a new color using a measurement instrument, see Measure and import spot color values on page 148.
Fiery Command WorkStation 144
Managing color
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
• Select one or more spot colors (press the Control key to select each additional color), right-click a selected
color, and select Spot Color Optimizer.
• Click Edit and select Spot Color Optimizer. You can then select spot colors in Device Linker.
3 When the optimization in Device Linker is complete, click Done to return to the Spot Colors window.
You can create a new spot color in an existing group or a new color group.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
2 Select the location in the spot color list or color group list where you want the new spot color or color group to be
placed and click New.
3 Select Spot Color or Group and type a name for the spot color or color group.
5 To save and add another spot color or group, click Add Another.
You can change the name of an existing spot color or color group if it is not locked. If you are matching the name of
a spot color to the name used in a particular job, be sure to match the name exactly, including uppercase or
lowercase letters and spaces.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
3 Type a new name and press the Enter key or the Return key.
You can delete a spot color or color group (and the spot colors in the group) if it is not locked.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
To support spot color definitions in addition to the ones provided on the Fiery Server, you can import a named color
profile from your computer as a custom color group.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
2 Select the location in the color group list where you want to add the imported color group.
3 Click Import.
5 Click Open.
The imported group is added to the color group list above the previously selected group, where it has priority over
the groups below it. If the imported group has the same name as an existing group in the list, you are prompted to
rename the imported group.
Fiery Command WorkStation 146
Managing color
To share a custom color group with another Fiery Server, you can export the group to a local copy that can be
imported to the other Fiery Server. You cannot export a locked color group.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
3 Click Export.
5 Browse to the location where you want to save the file and click Save.
2 Select the color group that you want to view and click Inspect.
Profile Inspector opens in a separate window. For more information about using Profile Inspector to compare spot
colors to the output profile, click the Help icon in Profile Inspector.
• If the Fiery Server lets you select an output profile in the Spot Colors main window, Spot Colors prints a swatch
book or swatch page using the specified output profile and the default job properties of the Fiery Server.
• If the Fiery Server lets you select Job Properties in the Spot Colors main window, Spot Colors prints a swatch
book or swatch page using the job properties you select. If you do not select any job properties in Spot Colors,
Spot Colors uses the default job properties of the Fiery Server.
In this case, if the Spot Color Matching option is disabled in the job properties, a message notifies you of this
setting. Because Spot Color Matching must be enabled for the spot color definitions in Spot Colors to be used,
Spot Colors always prints swatch books and swatch pages with the Spot Color Matching option enabled,
regardless of the job properties set in Spot Colors or on the Fiery Server.
Calibration
Calibrating the Fiery Server ensures consistent and reliable color output. Calibration adjusts for variations in the
color output of the printer, which changes over time and under different printing conditions.
Fiery Command WorkStation 147
Managing color
When you print a swatch page or a swatch book, if a warning appears indicating that the calibration is outside of the
limits, it means that the Fiery Server is configured to detect when a job will be printed using an out-of-date
calibration. (Not all types of Fiery Server support this feature.) You can ignore the warning and continue to print, but
for consistent color, print pages from Spot Colors using only calibrations that are up to date.
When you print a swatch page, you select a spot color and a pattern.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
3 Select a layout.
• Color Search Pattern - Prints patches with the same pattern as displayed in the Edit Spot Color or New Spot
Color dialog box.
• Color Neighbor Pattern - Prints the patches in the Edit Spot Color or New Spot Color dialog box in a 3-column
by 8-row format.
4 If you did not already specify the Paper Source in the print settings (Properties), select a paper size and a paper
source for printing.
5 Click Print or OK (whichever is supported by your Fiery Server) to print the swatch page.
When you print a swatch book, you select a spot color group and a layout.
1 In the Spot Colors window, select a color group and do one of the following:
• To print a swatch book of all of the spot colors in a color group, select the group and click Print.
• To print a swatch book of selected colors in a color group, select the group in the Spot Colors window,
Control-click to select the spot colors, and then click Print.
2 If the Fiery Server is running FS150/150Pro software or earlier, you can select a layout.
3 If you did not already specify the Paper Source in the print settings (Properties), select a paper size and a paper
source for printing.
Fiery Command WorkStation 148
Managing color
4 Click Print or OK (whichever is supported by your Fiery Server) to print the swatch page.
Note: To use an X-Rite i1Pro or i1Pro 2, you must use an instrument obtained from EFI. An instrument obtained
from another source will not work with Spot Colors.
1 Install and set up the spectrophotometer for use with your computer.
For installation and setup instructions, see the documentation that accompanies the instrument.
2 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
4 Place the spectrophotometer in its calibration cradle and click Calibrate. Calibration improves the accuracy of
measurements.
5 Select the desired color group and click New > Spot Color, or double-click the spot color to edit.
6 Place the spectrophotometer over the target color, making sure to center the sample aperture over the color.
7 Press the button on the spectrophotometer to take the measurement. The measured CMYK values are imported
into Spot Colors as follows:
• If an individual color is selected in the color list, its definition is updated to the measured color.
• If the Edit Spot Color or New Spot Color window is open, the Current Pick is updated to the measured color.
• If a group is selected in the color group list, a new color with the measured values is created within the group.
Substitute colors
The Substitute Colors feature is used to map a color in a job to a different color in the printed output.
Color substitutions affect only text, vector graphics, and line art. They have no effect on raster images.
When a color is defined as a substitute color, the settings for an RGB color (such as RGB Source) or CMYK color
(such as CMYK/Grayscale Source) have no effect. The color is converted with a process similar to spot color
conversion.
Important: You cannot use the Substitute Colors and Postflight features at the same time. These print options
are constrained.
Using the Substitute Colors feature involves the following tasks:
A substitute color resides in a special type of spot color group called a substitute group. For a substitute color, you
specify the CMYK value of the original color and the CMYK value of the color that substitutes for the original color.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
2 If a substitute group already exists, select the substitute group and skip to 5 on page 149. Otherwise, to create a
substitute group, select the location in the color group list where you want the new substitute group to be placed.
5 Select the location in the color list where you want the new substitute color to be placed.
9 Type the values for the original color. Use the Tab key to move from one field to the next.
11 Type the values for the converted color and click OK.
Note: Two-Color Print Mapping is different from Substitute Colors. Two-Color Print Mapping converts the process
colors used in a job. Substitute Colors converts one color in a job to a different color.
Fiery Command WorkStation 150
Managing color
Using the Two-Color Print Mapping feature involves the following tasks:
• Two-Color Print Mapping is ignored when Composite Overprint and Combine Separations are enabled.
• Postflight does not report on Two-Color Print Mapping, because Postflight reports the source state of a
document before any color conversions.
• You cannot select Two-Color Print Mapping and Substitute Colors for a job at the same time. Also, you cannot
select a substitute color when you configure Two-Color Print Mapping.
To configure Two-Color Print Mapping, you specify an output color for each original color in a job.
1 In Device Center, click the Resources tab and click Spot Colors.
3 For each of the two process colors, select the original process color used in the job.
Initially, Black and Magenta are displayed as the original process colors. When you change the color selection, the
Print As process color selection changes to the same process color. This is to avoid accidentally mapping one
process color to a different process color.
4 Under Print As, select a process color or a spot color to map the process color to. To select a spot color, select a
color group and color name from the lists.
5 Click OK. The Two-Color Print Mapping group is saved and it is added to the groups listed in the Spot Colors
window.
Fiery Command WorkStation 151
Managing server resources
Virtual printers
Virtual printers give users a way to print to the Fiery Server using predefined job settings. Virtual printers are
published on the network so users can set them up as a printer on their computer.
By default, three virtual printers are already set up to correspond to the Print, Hold, and Direct queues.
Administrators can manage virtual printers in Fiery Command WorkStation. They can duplicate the print and hold
virtual printers and modify their settings, but cannot duplicate the direct virtual printer. Administrators can also
create new virtual printers.
When a virtual printer in the list is selected, its job properties are displayed on the panel at the right.
The toolbar provides access to various tasks.
Administrators can publish job presets as virtual printers. See Preset print settings on page 70.
• Printer Name - If you are creating or duplicating a printer, type an alphanumeric name.
Note: Once a virtual printer has been created or duplicated, its name cannot be changed, although the print
settings can be changed.
• Description - Add or modify comments to describe the virtual printer to users—for example, "duplex company
brochure."
Fiery Command WorkStation 152
Managing server resources
• Job Actions - Select one of the standard Fiery Server actions, such as Hold, Process and Hold, Print, Print and
Hold, or Print and Delete. Sequential Print is also displayed if it has been enabled in Configure.
• Job Properties - Select Define to access Job Properties and specify print settings. Server presets are also listed as
choices.
Note: You can lock any job setting by clicking its lock icon.
• Default preset - Indicates that the default Preflight settings will be used unless you edit them.
• Edit - Allows you to select from other presets or specify each setting.
• On critical error - Specifies the action to be performed if any critical errors are found. Use Job Action refers to
the job action specified for the virtual printer.
Locking a job setting prevents other users from changing the setting.
Note the following:
• Submitting a job to the virtual printer through the Windows printer driver - Locked settings are dimmed.
The user cannot modify the settings.
• Submitting a job to the virtual printer through the Mac OS printer driver - The user can modify the locked
settings, but when the job reaches the Fiery Server, the job prints according to the locked job settings. Any
changes made by the user are overridden.
• Importing a job to Fiery Command WorkStation using a virtual printer - The imported job uses the locked
settings on the Fiery Server and overrides any conflicting settings that came with the job.
• Unlocked job settings - The user can change job settings, and the job prints according to these settings. But if a
job setting is not specified, the job uses the virtual printer setting.
Note: You can specify all the settings except for Job Properties. The job properties used are those specified for the
server preset.
Fiery Command WorkStation 153
Managing server resources
• Select a virtual printer in the list and click one of the following in the toolbar:
To print to a virtual printer from a Windows computer, you must make sure two-way communication is enabled and
update the installable options.
1 Locate the virtual printer in Printers and Faxes.
3 Click the Installable Options tab and make sure that Two-Way Communication with the Fiery Server is enabled.
4 Click Update.
Print a job
To print to a virtual printer from Windows, you must select job settings.
1 Open the file and select Print from the File menu.
2 Click Properties.
3 Make sure that the Fiery Printing tab is selected, and click the tabs to select job settings.
Fiery Command WorkStation 154
Managing server resources
When you add a virtual printer in Mac OS, you specify settings such as the IP address or DNS name of the Fiery
Server, the virtual printer name, and the print connection to use.
Before adding a virtual printer, you must install the printer driver for the Fiery Server.
1 Choose System Preferences from the Apple menu, and then choose Print & Fax.
4 Select Line Printer Daemon - LPD from the Protocol list, type the IP address or DNS name of the Fiery Server in
the Address field, and then type the virtual printer name in the Queue field.
6 Select the printer driver you just installed from the Print Using menu.
7 Click Add.
8 Click Continue.
When you send jobs to the Fiery Server using this printer, the settings for the virtual printer are applied to your
job.
To print to a virtual printer from a Mac OS computer, you must make sure two-way communication is enabled so
any installable options are updated.
3 Choose Fiery Features from the drop-down list and select Two-Way Communication.
When Two-Way Communication is enabled, the virtual printer will be updated with the options installed on the
copier/printer.
4 Click Print.
Fiery Command WorkStation 155
Managing server resources
Paper Catalog
Paper Catalog is a system-based paper warehouse database, which can store attributes of any media stock available in
a production print shop.
The Paper Catalog database resides on the Fiery Server and is not affected when you reboot or clear the Fiery Server.
If Paper Catalog is supported on the Fiery Server, any user can select media for a job from the Paper Catalog in the
printer driver or in Job Properties in Fiery Command WorkStation.
To set up and manage Paper Catalog, you must log in to Fiery Command WorkStation with Administrator access.
Access levels
The level of Paper Catalog functionality available to you depends on how you log into Fiery Command WorkStation.
The relevant access levels are:
• Administrator - Has full access to all Fiery Command WorkStation and Fiery Server functions. Administrator
password is required.
• Operator - Has access to all Job Center functions. In Device Center, does not have access to Configure, Backup
and Restore, changing passwords, and deleting the Job Log. Can view Paper Catalog, virtual printers, and color
management functions, but cannot edit them. Operator password is required.
• Define multiple media attribute combinations and assign unique names to each combination
• Assign color profiles for each media
• Select predefined media when they submit their job
• Assign media to trays
• Specify which Paper Catalog columns are available for users
• Centrally maintain their Paper Catalog database
Paper Catalog allows Operators to:
Paper Catalog is available from the Job Properties dialog box in Fiery Command WorkStation.
1 Double-click a job in the Job Center window, or select the job and either right-click to select Properties or choose
Actions > Properties.
3 Select the desired item from the Paper Catalog list. To view the media attributes associated with each entry, click
the Select button.
You can also select from the Paper Catalog in the Mixed Media interface.
If you select Booklet in the Layout tab, you can choose Select from Paper Catalog when assigning media.
Note: If you specify a Paper Catalog entry and then use Job Properties to change the page size (or another
attribute associated with the entry), the Paper Catalog assignment is canceled. Job Properties subsequently
displays "none defined" for Paper Catalog.
2 In the Page View pane in Preview, right-click the desired page and select Assign Media.
3 In the window that appears, click the arrow beside the Media field to display the media menu.
5 In the Paper Catalog window, select your desired media and click OK.
6 Click OK again.
For more information, see Fiery JobMaster Help.
2 In the Settings pane in the Preview window, click the Edit button next to the Sheet field.
3 In the window that appears, click the arrow beside the Media field to display the media menu.
5 In the Paper Catalog window, select your desired media and click OK.
6 Click OK again.
For more information, see Fiery JobMaster Help.
Fiery Command WorkStation 157
Managing server resources
1 Log into the desired Fiery Server as Administrator. Enter the Administrator password if one has been set.
When creating a Paper Catalog entry, administrators can choose from two sets of media attributes: Printer (PPD)
based and JDF (Job Definition Format).
• The PPD set of media attributes are specific to the Fiery Server. The name of each setting is standard across
devices, but the list of possible options varies. The PPD settings are the default. The PPD set is recommended for
new and intermediate users.
• The JDF set of media attributes comes from the printing industry standard specifications for Job Definition
Format. This set of media attributes is not specific to the Fiery Server, and allows for smooth mapping of media
definitions from MIS-job submission workflows. The JDF set is recommended for advanced users familiar with
the JDF workflow.
Note: The Fiery Server must support JDF printing and the feature must be enabled in Configure.
Some of the media attributes are common to both sets, although the naming may be slightly different. The JDF set
provides more granularity.
1 Open Paper Catalog from Device Center > Resources or by clicking the Paper Catalog icon in Job Center.
The column headings in the Paper Catalog window change dynamically, according to whether you are using PPD-
based substrate attributes or JDF substrate attributes.
Administrators can change the order of these columns in the display, or add/delete the columns to present
information useful to your particular print environment. To adjust the width of a column, drag the column border to
the left or right.
• Click Add to choose an item from the menu to add to the columns.
• Click Delete to remove a column.
• Click Move Left or Move Right to move a column in the desired direction.
Duplicate names for catalog entries are allowed when you create a new Paper Catalog entry, except on some printers.
On those printers, duplicate names are ignored by Paper Catalog.
1 Open Paper Catalog from Device Center > Resources or by clicking the Paper Catalog icon in Job Center.
2 Click Settings in the Paper Catalog menu bar to choose either PPD-based or JDF specifications.
PPD is the default set of media attributes for the printer.
Note: If you enter an incorrect value for a media attribute, and move on to another media attribute, the incorrect
media attribute will revert to its previous value.
• If you selected JDF settings, click the tabs to specify the attributes.
You can initiate the process of creating a new Paper Catalog entry from the tray if media settings have already
been specified for that tray.
To use this procedure, you must select PPD-based specifications in the Paper Catalog Settings dialog box.
1 Open Paper Catalog from Device Center > Resources or by clicking the Paper Catalog icon in Job Center.
2 Click Settings in the Paper Catalog menu bar to choose PPD-based specifications.
PPD is the default set of media attributes for the printer. For information about the specific attributes, see
Printing.
Fiery Command WorkStation 159
Managing server resources
3 In Fiery Command WorkStation, click the tray in the Consumables pane, and select Add New Media from
the menu.
The New Media dialog opens with the settings from the tray populating the matching fields. These settings
cannot be edited.
4 Specify more attributes for the new media in the New Media dialog, if required.
You can specify JDF media attributes and feed direction for a Paper Catalog media entry.
• In the main Paper Catalog window, click the Add New icon.
• To edit an existing catalog entry, select the entry and click the Edit button.
2 In the New > Basic or New > Other Attributes window, enter information in the text fields, or click the arrow to
access the drop-down menu for an attribute.
3 Click the Settings tab, and specify Feed Direction by clicking either Long Edge Feed or Short Edge Feed.
To specify additional settings, see Specify color profile settings on page 159.
The new entry appears as an editable (white) entry line in the Paper Catalog window.
You can associate a Fiery Server color output profile with a Paper Catalog entry.
Any default or custom Fiery Server color profile appears listed by name as a possible Paper Catalog attribute.
• In the main Paper Catalog window, click the Add New icon.
• To edit an existing catalog entry, select the entry and click the Edit button.
2 Assign the appropriate profile options to your catalog entry. For JDF attributes, these options are on the Settings
tab.
• Front Color Profile - Default color profile applied only to the front side of the media. This attribute can be
overridden by specifying a different color profile in Job Properties. Appears in both the PPD and JDF settings.
• Back Color Profile - Default color profile applied only to the back side of the media. This attribute can be
overridden by specifying a different color profile in Job Properties. Appears in both the PPD and JDF settings.
3 Specify Feed Direction, if available, by clicking either Long Edge Feed or Short Edge Feed.
The new entry appears as an editable (white) entry line in the Paper Catalog window.
You can duplicate an existing catalog entry and then customize it to create a new entry.
Duplicate names for catalog entries are allowed when you create a new Paper Catalog entry, except on some printers.
On those printers, duplicate names are ignored by Paper Catalog.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, select the Paper Catalog entry that you want to duplicate.
2 Click the Duplicate button, enter a new name if desired, and click OK.
The duplicated entry appears at the bottom of the list.
3 To customize your catalog entry, click the Edit button. See Edit or delete a catalog entry on page 160.
Note: You can also right-click a Paper Catalog entry, and choose Edit or Duplicate.
You can edit or delete a Paper Catalog entry, with a few limitations.
You cannot delete or edit an entry if:
• Any job on the Fiery Server, either printing, held, or already printed, is using the Paper Catalog entry.
• The Paper Catalog entry is assigned to a tray.
• The Paper Catalog entry is locked.
If you try to delete a Paper Catalog entry that is associated with a job or assigned to a tray, a message asks if you want
to remove the association with the job or the tray.
Only an Administrator can access Paper Catalog Setup.
You can specify media attributes and values for Paper Catalog entries.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, select the entry that you want to edit, and click Edit or double-click the
selected entry.
Editable entries appear as white rows.
2 Enter information in the text fields, or click the arrow to display the drop-down menu for that attribute.
Choose the new attribute setting or enter the new attribute value.
All changes are automatically saved.
Note: If you enter an incorrect value for a media attribute, and move on to another media attribute, the
incorrect media attribute will revert to its previous value.
Fiery Command WorkStation 161
Managing server resources
You can delete one or more Paper Catalog entries in the main Paper Catalog window.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, select the Paper Catalog entry that you want to delete from the list.
Use shift-click to select multiple sequential entries, and Ctrl-click to select multiple entries that are not
sequential.
3 Click Yes.
Note: You can also select multiple entries and right-click them to choose Delete.
Administrators can define a custom page size when creating or editing a Paper Catalog entry.
1 Do one of the following:
• In PPD settings, click Custom and enter the custom page values for that catalog entry.
• In JDF settings, click Custom in the Basic tab and enter the custom page dimensions.
Exported databases are saved as .xml files and can be imported back into Paper Catalog at any time.
Before you replace your Paper Catalog database or reinstall system software, we recommend that you first back up
your existing database by exporting it to a remote location. You can choose to export all entries in the database or a
subset.
2 Navigate to the location on your computer or network where you want to save the exported database file.
You can import a new database to replace your existing Paper Catalog database.
Before you replace your Paper Catalog database, we recommend that you first archive your existing database by
exporting it.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, click the arrow beside the Import icon and choose Replace Existing....
2 Navigate to the replacement database .xml file on your computer or network, and click Open.
You can import the entries from another database to create a merged Paper Catalog database.
If the imported database contains an entry that has identical attributes as an entry in the original database, the new
entry is not imported and the original entry remains intact in the merged database.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, click the arrow beside the Import icon and choose Merge with Existing....
2 Navigate to the database .xml file on your computer or network that you want to import, and click Open.
Your current Paper Catalog database is now merged with the one you just selected.
Note: When you merge databases, all color profile associations in the imported database are discarded.
Repeat the process for additional Paper Catalog databases that you want to merge into the existing one.
Fiery Command WorkStation 163
Managing server resources
The Reset to Factory command allows you to revert your Paper Catalog database to the factory default entries and
attributes.
Any added or edited catalog entries are lost when you reset the Paper Catalog to factory defaults, unless they have
been assigned to a job, assigned to a tray, or are locked. To save your customized entries, first export your existing
catalog database before you reset it to factory defaults.
By default, all Paper Catalog entries are visible and selectable for a job by users; in other words, they are "published."
When an administrator unpublishes an entry, it is dimmed in the Paper Catalog main window, and does not appear
in the Paper Catalog list in Job Properties or the printer driver. An Administrator can also choose to hide
unpublished entries in the Paper Catalog window.
When an entry, or entries, have been unpublished, an administrator can always publish them again.
1 In the main Paper Catalog window, select the entry or entries you want to publish or unpublish.
Use shift-click to select multiple sequential entries, and ctrl-click to select multiple entries that are not sequential.
• To unpublish an entry, click the Unpublish icon in the Paper Catalog menu bar.
• To publish an entry, click the Publish icon in the Paper Catalog menu bar.
Note: You can also right-click a Paper Catalog entry, or entries, and choose Unpublish or Publish.
Media attributes
When you create or edit a Paper Catalog entry, you can select from a number of media attributes. To set media
attributes for a catalog entry, use the main Paper Catalog window or the Edit window.
Mandatory attributes appear with an asterisk (*) next to the name. You cannot leave the field for a mandatory
attribute empty.
Paper Catalog offers you two sets of media attributes:
Attribute names appear in the column headers of the main Paper Catalog window, according to whether you have
selected PPD or JDF settings.
JDF attributes are described below. The PPD attributes provided to create a Paper Catalog entry vary from project to
project, so the terminology for the attributes will vary. For a description of the PPD settings available for your
product, see Printing.
Back Coating Indicates the type of pre-process coating applied to the back side of the
media sheet.
Back Color Profile Default color profile applied only to the back side of the media. This
attribute can be overridden by specifying a different color profile in Job
Properties. Appears in both the PPD and JDF settings.
Back Gloss Value The percentage of light reflected by the back side of the media when it is
viewed under illumination with a 75-degree angle of incidence. A higher
percentage of reflection indicates a higher gloss value.
Brightness Light reflectance of the media used. Enter a value from 0% (low reflectance)
to 100% (high reflectance).
CIE Lab Color The device-independent color of the media. Specify the color using CIE
L*a*b* values.
CIE Tint Describes how neutral, unsaturated, or non-chromatic the media is. Specify
the media tint using values in the CIE xyz coordinate system. A coordinate
of 0 indicates a perfectly neutral tint in the red-green axis.
CIE Whiteness Describes the amount of overall light reflected by the media, as measured
across the entire visible spectrum. Specify the reflection amount using
values in the CIE xyz coordinate system. A coordinate of (100, 100, 100)
indicates perfect whiteness.
Color name Color of the media used. To indicate translucent media, choose a "Clear"
color option.
Custom color name Custom color of the media used. If your desired color does not appear in the
Color menu, type the name of your custom color into this field.
Description Descriptive information that would enable a user to order more of this
media from a paper merchant. For example, the description might read
Hammermill Color Copy 10246-7 8 1/2” x 11" 105 gsm Photo White Ultra
Smooth.
Feed Direction The Feed Direction attribute specifies the orientation of the media as it
feeds into the printhead. See Feed Direction on page 167.
Front Coating The type of pre-process coating applied to the front side of the media sheet.
Fiery Command WorkStation 165
Managing server resources
Front Color Profile Default color profile applied only to the front side of the media. This
attribute can be overridden by specifying a different color profile in Job
Properties. Appears in both the PPD and JDF settings.
Front Gloss Value The percentage of light reflected by the front side of the media when it is
viewed under illumination with a 75-degree angle of incidence. A higher
percentage of reflection indicates a higher gloss value.
Grade The Grade attribute indicates the surface quality of the media, expressed as
a grade level from 1 to 5. See Grade on page 167.
Grain Direction Direction of paper grain on the media used. Choose from the following
options:
• Short - Grain runs parallel to the short edge of the media, as defined by
Size.
• Long - Grain runs parallel to the long edge of the media, as defined by
Size.
Hole Type Pattern of punched holes (if any) on the media used.
Imageable Sides Specifies which side(s) of the media support print imaging.
Media Unit The Media Unit attribute indicates the physical format of the media that is
fed into the printer. See Media Unit on page 167.
Media Weight The PPD setting for weight of the media used, measured in grams per
square meter (gsm) or pounds (lbs). The similar JDF setting is Weight on
page 172.
Name Descriptive name for the catalog entry, to describe the media to load in the
trays, such as 11" x 17" Hammermill 105 gsm. Type the desired name into
this field.
Opacity The Opacity attribute indicates the level of transparency of the media. See
Opacity on page 167.
Opacity Level % The media's percentage of opacity. 0% represents full transparency, and
100% represents full opacity.
Paper Color The PPD setting for the color of the paper to be used. JDF settings for color
of media include Color and Custom Color Name.
Paper Size Width and height dimensions of the media used. You can select a size or
enter a custom paper size in inches, millimeters, or points.
For information about specific Paper Size options, see Printing, which is part
of the user documentation set.
Fiery Command WorkStation 166
Managing server resources
Paper Type The PPD setting that includes categories that are similar to those in the JDF
Type, Type Details on page 169, and Texture on page 168 settings.
Pre-Printed When the check box is selected, the media contains pre-printed content (for
example, stationery paper with a pre-printed letterhead). When the check
box is cleared, the media is not pre-printed.
Product ID Part number, item code, article number, or other identifier for the media
used, as defined manually by the print operator, or by a Management
Information System (MIS).
Punched Paper The PPD setting for possible hole-punch combinations. The similar JDF
setting is Hole Type.
Set Count Defines the number of pieces in a grouped media set. For example, tab stock
with five pre-cut tabs has a Set Count of "5".
Tab Properties When you specify JDF Settings for a new Paper Catalog entry, and select a
tab stock from the Type Details menu, the Tab Properties button is enabled.
See Tab Properties on page 168.
Texture The Texture attribute indicates the surface texture of the media used. See
Texture on page 168.
Type Stock type of the media used. Choose from the following options:
Type Details The Type Details attribute describes additional details of the media stock
type used. See Type Details on page 169.
US Basic Size The US Basic Size attribute indicates the type of media stock (measured in
inches), as defined by US industry standards. See US Basic Size on page 170.
Weight The Weight attribute indicates the weight of the media used, measured in
grams per square meter (gsm) or pounds (lbs). See Weight on page 172.
Fiery Command WorkStation 167
Managing server resources
Feed Direction
The Feed Direction attribute specifies the orientation of the media as it feeds into the printhead.
Choose from the following options:
Long Edge Feed Media feeds into the printhead along the long edge of the sheet, as
defined by Size.
Short Edge Feed Media feeds into the printhead along the short edge of the sheet, as
defined by Size.
Grade
The Grade attribute indicates the surface quality of the media, expressed as a grade level from 1 to 5.
Note: This attribute is not usually used for media used in digital printing.
If required, use the following guidelines:
1 Gloss-coated paper
2 Matte-coated paper
Media Unit
The Media Unit attribute indicates the physical format of the media that is fed into the copier/printer.
Choose from the following options:
Opacity
Opaque The media is opaque. If the media is printed on both sides, the image on
the other side does not show through under normal lighting conditions.
Fiery Command WorkStation 168
Managing server resources
Translucent The media is partially transparent, under certain lighting conditions such
as back-lit viewing.
Tab Properties
When you specify JDF Settings for a new Paper Catalog entry, and select a tab stock from the Type Details
menu, the Tab Properties button is enabled.
Click the button to choose the following JDF tab settings:
Tab width The width along the tab edge as measured along the mid-line of the tab.
Each tab is centered within a space called the "tab pitch".
Tab edge Indicates which edge (left, top, right, or bottom) of the media has tabs.
Tab extension distance The positive distance in points that the tab extends beyond the body of
the other media.
Tab offset The magnitude of the distance in points from the corner of the media to
the edge of the first tab pitch point of the first tab in the bank along the
tab edge. This distance is the same on both ends of the bank of tabs.
Tabs per bank The number of equal-sized tabs in a single set if all positions are filled.
Texture
The Texture attribute indicates the surface texture of the media used.
Choose from the following options, or type in a custom description:
Embossed Linen Surface resembling coarse woven cloth, with a pronounced embossed
texture.
English Surface that is smoother than Machine Finished, but rougher than Super
Calendared.
Light Cockle Surface that has a rough, wrinkled, irregular finish, with less pronounced
wrinkles than in Cockle.
Super Smooth Very flat and even finish. Smoother than Ultra Smooth.
Traditional Laid Surface with a heavier pattern of vertical and horizontal lines than Laid.
Ultra Smooth Very flat and even finish, but not as smooth as Super Smooth.
Type Details
The Type Details attribute describes additional details of the media stock type used.
Choose from the following options:
Plain Choose this option if your media stock does not require a special
description. Some systems require a value of plain, but leaving this blank
if the detail is not needed would be better, if the print engine allows it.
Continuous Long Opaque media composed of sheets continuously connected along the
long edge, as defined by Size.
Continuous Short Opaque media composed of sheets continuously connected along the
short edge, as defined by Size.
Envelope Media that can be used for conventional mailing purposes. Can either be
plain envelopes or envelopes with transparent address windows.
Envelope Plain Envelopes that are not pre-printed and do not have address windows.
Envelope Window Envelopes that have transparent windows for addressing purposes.
Full Cut Tabs Media with a single long tab that extends along the full length of the
sheet.
Multi-Part Form Media designed for use as a multi-layer form. Individual layers of the
form are detached from one another and may be drawn from separate
paper trays. It is more likely that the layers are pre-collated. These media
tend to be referred to as NCR - No Carbon Required.
Pre Cut Tabs Media with two or more tabs that extend along an edge of the sheet.
Stationery Cut sheets of opaque media. Generic paper falls under this category.
Tab Stock Media with one or more tabs. Can be either Full Cut Tabs or Pre Cut
Tabs, or refer to media with enough thickness and stiffness to be used as
a tab. The media may or may not have tabs.
For example, the metric weight of a 50lb bond stock is calculated as follows:
Basis Weight x Conversion Factor = 50 x 3.76 = 188gsm
US Basic Size
The US Basic Size attribute indicates the type of media stock (measured in inches), as defined by US industry
standards.
The US basic size is the established size (in inches) of paper stocks upon which the basis weight for the stock is
calculated in the United States. The basic size of most paper stocks is also recognized by buyers and sellers as
one size that has common use requirements. Choose from the following options:
Weight
The Weight attribute indicates the weight of the media used, measured in grams per square meter (gsm) or
pounds (lbs).
The basis weights of most North American stock types are measured in pounds (lbs). To convert to gsm,
multiply the basis weight by the appropriate conversion factor for the listed stock type in the following table:
Bond 3.76
Ledger 3.76
Duplicator 3.76
Safety 3.76
Tagboard 1.63
Blanks 2.28
Blotter 3.08
Label 1.48
Newsprint 1.63
Fiery Command WorkStation 173
Managing server resources
Tray association
Tray association allows you to assign a Paper Catalog media entry to a printer tray. Use this feature to allow the
printer to automatically pull specific Paper Catalog assigned media for a job that uses a particular Paper Catalog
entry.
• Consumables tab
• Paper Catalog window
• Paper Catalog list in Job Properties Media tab
In the Consumables tab in Fiery Command WorkStation, all trays installed on the printer are listed with the size of
the media loaded displayed.
If a media entry from Paper Catalog has been associated with a specific tray, that tray displays the name of the media.
If no media from the Paper Catalog has been associated, the tray displays as "Unassigned."
Note: When a Paper Catalog entry is assigned to a tray, any selection made for Input Tray for that media in Job
Properties will be ignored.
You can assign media to a tray in a number of ways, but the media entry must match the paper attributes that are
loaded in that tray. Paper Catalog filters the entries shown for each tray by the paper attributes reported from the
Fiery Server.
You can also view the media supply in a tray. See Monitor media status in a tray on page 177.
Use the tray association feature to assign media from the Paper Catalog to the trays installed on the copier/printer. If
the smart media feature is turned on in Paper Catalog Settings, you can perform automatic tray association.
In Paper Catalog, you can associate media with a tray by right-clicking or by dragging and dropping.
1 Select Paper Catalog in Device Center > Resources.
• Right-click the media, select Associate to, and select the tray.
• Drag and drop the media to the desired tray displayed in the Consumables pane.
Fiery Command WorkStation 174
Managing server resources
Associate to will be displayed only if the media you select matches the specifications for the specific tray.
Similarly, you can only drag and drop a media entry that matches the specifications. For instance, you cannot
associate Letter size media to a tray intended for Tabloid, or Letter size media with a different weight or feed
direction.
From the Fiery Command WorkStation Consumables tab, you can create or remove an association between
media and a tray.
1 In the main Fiery Command WorkStation window, click the Consumables tab in the bottom left pane.
Note: If media has been assigned to a tray previously, you can also choose Remove Association. If you click
Remove Association, the association is removed without any further action on your part.
Smart media
Smart media performs automatic tray association when your favorite media is loaded.
This feature is intended for a specific environment, such as a print shop, where the copier/printer is configured with
the same paper in the tray more than 90 percent of the time. In this environment, users may be accustomed to attach
the paper labels onto the trays to remind the operators which paper to load. With the smart media feature, the Fiery
Server remembers these favorite media and performs an automatic tray association when any media with the same
attributes is loaded in the tray.
Smart media can be defined in one of the following workflows:
You turn on smart media in the Paper Catalog Settings dialog box.
1 Do one of the following:
Note: JDF based media attributes cannot be used when defining smart media.
For information about the Manage dialog, see Managing smart media on page 176.
You can add smart media from Paper Catalog, from the tray, or from the Manage Smart Media dialog box.
2 Click Manage.
3 Click Add in the Manage Smart Media dialog, then choose Add from Paper Catalog.
The selected media is designated as smart media in the Manage Smart Media dialog.
To add smart media, you can specify settings for loaded media on the printer control panel and in the New
Media dialog box.
1 Select Enable Smart Media in the Paper Catalog Settings dialog.
2 Load media in the tray and specify media settings on the printer control panel.
Fiery Command WorkStation 176
Managing server resources
3 In Fiery Command WorkStation, click the tray in the consumables pane, and select Add New Media from the
menu.
Note: The Add New Media option only appears if PPD-based specifications have been selected in the Paper
Catalog Settings dialog box.
The New Media dialog opens with the settings from the tray populating the matching fields. These settings
cannot be edited.
4 Specify more attributes for the new media in the New Media dialog, if required.
For more information about adding a new media in Paper Catalog, see Create a new Paper Catalog entry on
page 158.
The new media is designated as a smart media, and every time a media with matching attributes is loaded in the
tray, the tray is automatically associated with the smart media.
Add smart media from the Manage Smart Media dialog box
You can select a tray and use the Manage Smart Media dialog box to add smart media.
1 Select a tray in the Consumables pane.
3 In the Manage Smart Media dialog, select a tray, click Add, and select Add from tray.
When smart media has been created, it is listed in the Manage Smart Media dialog. In this dialog, all available
trays are listed, and for each tray, all smart media are listed.
The Manage Smart Media dialog can be accessed from the Paper Catalog Settings dialog or from the contextual
actions menu for a selected tray in the Consumables pane.
You can perform the following actions:
If your copier/printer supports reporting media levels in each tray, you can check the status from the Consumables
pane.
1 In the main Fiery Command WorkStation window, click the Consumables tab in the bottom left pane.
Each tray displays a visual graphic of the media loaded.
VDP resources
VDP (Variable Data Printing) jobs use master elements, and global and reusable resources for variable elements
inside jobs.
You can use FreeForm masters for any fixed-element data you might combine with different data from day to day.
For example, you can store a letterhead template as a FreeForm master and use it repeatedly as the background for
different letter content (the variable-element data).
Global resources are required images that must be downloaded to the Fiery Server for VDP jobs with variable
elements. These global resources are stored on the Fiery Server as a group inside each individual project.
VDP Resources allows an Administrator to manage disk space on the Fiery Server by:
• Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Resources > VDP Resources.
• Select Go > Device Center > VDP Resources.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Resources > VDP Resources.
2 To view FreeForm masters, click FreeForm, select a FreeForm master, and then click List View or Thumbnail View
from the View menu (if your Fiery Server supports it).
3 To delete FreeForm masters, click FreeForm, select a FreeForm language or master file, and then click Delete.
Fiery Command WorkStation 178
Managing server resources
4 To update current information, click Refresh (if your Fiery Server supports it).
Using Device Center’s VDP Resources feature, you can back up a FreeForm master in a separate file.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery print controller and click Device Center > Resources > VDP Resources.
2 Click FreeForm, select a FreeForm language, and then select a FreeForm master.
3 Click Backup.
4 Specify the location in which to save the file, and then click OK.
Using Device Center’s VDP Resources feature, you can back up projects in a separate file.
Backup and restore are not available for PDF/VT jobs.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery print controller and click Device Center > Resources > VDP Resources.
3 Select the project that you want to archive and click Backup.
4 Specify the location in which to save the file, and then click OK.
If you have backed up a FreeForm master in a separate file, you can restore it.
1 Click Restore.
2 Navigate to the location of the archived master file, select the file, and then click Restore.
If you restore an archived file with an identical file name of an existing file, you are asked whether to overwrite
the existing file.
Fiery Command WorkStation 179
Managing server resources
Archived jobs can only be restored to the Fiery Server where the files were originally archived.
Note: Except for FreeForm, VDP languages without global resources do not appear in VDP Resources. VDP
languages for which global resources have been restored appear in VDP Resources.
1 Click Restore.
2 Navigate to the location of the archived file, select the file, and then click Restore.
If you restore an archived file with an identical file name of an existing file, you are asked whether to overwrite
the existing file.
2 To view global resources, click a project and click List View or Thumbnail View from the View menu (if your Fiery
Server supports it).
3 To view submitted job name information and resources for a project, click a project and click Resources or Jobs
(if your Fiery Server supports it).
4 To delete global resources, click a VDP language or a project, and then click Delete.
5 To update current information, click Refresh (if your Fiery Server supports it).
Fonts
The Font Manager lists all PostScript and PCL fonts resident on the Fiery Server. With the Font Manager, you can
backup and restore only PostScript fonts on the Fiery Server, as well as print the complete Font List.
Note: The PCL option is available on a Fiery Server that supports it. Support is limited to viewing the PCL Font List.
PCL font downloading is not available.
• To add or update fonts, click Add New. (You can add Adobe PostScript Type 1 fonts.) Click Add to locate the
font that you wish to download, and then click OK and Refresh.
• To delete a font, select an unlocked font in the Font List and click Delete. Locked fonts cannot be deleted.
• To print the Font List, click Print.
Note: You must be logged in as Administrator to back up and restore fonts on the Fiery Server.
3 In the window that appears, select Fonts from the list and follow the prompts. Observe these guidelines:
• Do not back up fonts to an internal hard drive that also contains the Fiery Server.
• You must restore fonts only to the same Fiery Server from which the fonts were originally backed up.
You can view user and group privileges. Administrators assign privileges from Configure, using default groups or
creating new groups. All users in a group have the same privileges.
You can use Compare Rights to display a quick summary table of Fiery Server privileges and user and group access
rights.
To modify user and group privileges, click Configure. For more information, seeAccess Configure from Fiery
Command WorkStation on page 32.
Note: You must be logged in as an Administrator to view privileges and access Configure.
Fiery Command WorkStation 181
Managing server resources
• Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Users > Users & Groups.
• Choose Go > Users & Groups.
• Click a user or group on the left and view information about the particular user or group in the right window
pane.
• Click Info to display information such as the total number of users in the group and a group description, if
available. The group's Fiery Server privileges are displayed under Privileges.
• Click Users to display a list of users for that particular group along with their user names, names, and e-mail
addresses, if available.
• Under LDAP Users & Groups, you can view the summary of LDAP Setup, such as whether LDAP is enabled,
and the total number of groups and users.
• Under Local Users & Groups, you can view the total number of local Fiery Server users and groups. This does
not include the total number of members of LDAP groups.
3 Click Configure to change current Fiery Server Setup options. See Access Configure on page 31.
Compare rights
You can display a summary of Fiery Server privileges and user and group access rights.
• Do one of the following:
• Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Users > Compare Rights.
• Choose Go > Compare Rights.
Click Configure to change current Fiery Server Setup options. See Access Configure on page 31.
Fiery Command WorkStation 182
Managing server resources
With Groups, administrators can set up print groups with selected privileges, as well as add users to the group.
Access Groups
The Groups feature allows you to set up print groups with selected privileges, as well as add users to the group.
• Do one of the following:
• Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Users > Users & Groups.
• Choose Go > Device Center, and then click Users > Users & Groups.
Add a Group
You can add, delete, or change the name of a group.
1 Connect to the desired Fiery Server and click Device Center > Users > Users & Groups.
2 Click Configure.
• Click Save.
• Click Save and Add Users.
8 (Optional) Do one of the following:
• To modify the group description or privileges, select one from the list, and then click the Edit icon.
• To delete a group, select one from the list, and then click the Delete icon.
For more information about Groups, see your Fiery Server documentation.
Fiery Command WorkStation 183
Managing server resources
The Job Log preserves a record of all processed and printed jobs, the date and time they were printed, and their
characteristics.
Note: If an Administrator clears the Fiery Server or installs new software, the Job Log may also be cleared.
An Administrator can set automated Job Log maintenance in Configure, such as scheduling a day and time to export
and clear the Job Log.
For more information about how to manage the Job Log in Configure, see Configure Help.
If you select Proof Print for a job, the printed proof appears in the Job Log with a copy count set to one.
3 Choose the printer that you want to print to: either Fiery (the Fiery Server you are currently connected to) or
Local Printer.
2 Click Export.
3 Select Current View to export the current date range view of the Job Log or select Complete Log to export the
entire Job Log, regardless of the date range specified in your view.
Some graphic arts features of the Fiery Server are available through feature packages. To determine which packages
are supported by your Fiery Server, see the documentation that accompanies your Fiery Server.
• Hot Folders
• Hot Folders filters
• Postflight print option
Control Bar
If the Control Bar feature is supported by your Fiery Server, you can add a control bar (containing a static color bar
and dynamic job information) to each printed page at a user-defined location.
This is useful for proofing and checking the color accuracy of a job. You can use a control bar, in conjunction with
analytical tools such as Fiery Color Profiler Suite, to evaluate color quality.
You can turn on a control bar for an individual job or you can set a server default to print a control bar for all jobs.
You can edit a control bar or create a new one. Since a control bar does not become a part of a job, a job printed with
a control bar can print differently later if the control bar definition has changed.
Control Bar is supported for PostScript and PDF jobs.
Fiery Command WorkStation 187
Graphic arts tools
The Control Bar functions that are available to you depend on the version of software that is running on the Fiery
Server.
• If the Fiery system software is FS100/100Pro or earlier, you can create custom control bars, each targeted to a
different page size. The Control Bar print option turns on the feature for a job, and the job's page size determines
which control bar is applied. If no control bar exists for the job's page size, the factory-supplied control bar
(called Default) is used.
• If the Fiery system software is FS200/200Pro or later, the factory-supplied control bar (called Fiery) and any
custom control bars that you create can be applied to any page size. The Control Bar print option lets you select
which control bar, if any, to use for a job. In addition, when you edit a control bar definition, a preview shows
how the control bar will appear on a specified page size.
Note: For Fiery system software FS200/200Pro or later, a control bar can be printed on any page size and it is not
necessary to specify the System Page Size for a control bar. System Page Size applies to FS100/100Pro or earlier only.
Every page produced by the Fiery Server has a System Page Size. These two numbers represent the width and height
of the page, in points, as processed by the system. No two control bars can use the same System Page Size values. If
you try to save a custom control bar that has the same the System Page Size as an existing control bar, a warning
message is displayed.
To determine the System Page Size for a particular paper size, print a job with the factory-supplied control bar on
the targeted paper size and orientation. The System Page Size is printed in the control bar.
• Fiery system software FS100/100Pro or earlier - Select or clear the option. All pages are printed with the
control bar for the page size or the factory-supplied control bar, if there is no control bar for the page size.
• Fiery system software FS200/200Pro or later - Select the control bar or select Off. All pages are printed with the
selected control bar.
2 Select the control bar in the list on the left side and view the definition on the right side of the window.
3 To change settings, click Edit and define the values for each option.
For Fiery system software FS100/100Pro or earlier:
• Description - A one-line description of the control bar for your future reference.
• Color Bar EPS File - The EPS file contains a color bar and any logo or static information that you want to
include on the page. The default is Standard. Select Custom to select a user-designed EPS file from your
computer, or select None to indicate that no EPS file is required.
• Job Information - The job settings that you select are printed with the color bar. The print options vary
depending on your model of Fiery Server.
• Text Location - This list allows you to select the location in which you want the job information printed on the
page. The text is oriented to be read along the specified page edge.
• Distance from the edge - These options allow you to define the distance from the lower-left corner at which
you want the job information to begin printing.
• Control bar name - The name used to select the control bar.
Note: In the printer driver, this name appears only if Two-Way Communication is enabled.
• Color bar - Lets you turn the display of the color bar on or off, select one of several factory-supplied images or
import your custom image (EPS or PDF format), and specify the placement of the image.
Note: For an image in PDF format, only the first page is used.
• Job information - Lets you turn the display of the job information on or off, select the job settings to display,
and specify the appearance and placement of the text.
Note: The available job settings depend on the model of Fiery Server.
• Page settings - Lets you select the preview page size, specify margins (the color bar and job information are
placed inside these margins), and select mirror image (for transparent media).
• To duplicate a control bar, select the control bar and click Duplicate.
• To create a custom control bar, click Create New.
Fiery Command WorkStation 189
Graphic arts tools
Note: You can delete a custom control bar but you cannot delete the factory-supplied control bar.
A control bar created on a Fiery Server with FS200/200 Pro software cannot be imported to a Fiery Server with an
earlier version of software, and vice versa.
If an exported control bar contains any features that are not supported on the Fiery Server to which it is imported
(for example, job settings specific to the Fiery Server), those features are hidden.
1 In Device Center, click the Color Setup tab and click Control Bar.
• To export a control bar, select the control bar, click Export, browse to the location where you want to save the
file, and click Select Folder.
• To import a control bar, click Import, locate and select the control bar file, and click Open.
3 To delete a custom control bar, select the control bar, click Delete, and then click Yes to confirm.
Trapping
Trapping is a technique to prevent white edges around objects, or “halos,” caused by the misalignment of color
plates. With trapping, objects are printed with slightly enlarged edges, or traps, to fill any gaps between objects.
Trapping is applied to a job when the Auto Trapping print option is enabled.
Fiery Command WorkStation 190
Graphic arts tools
If configurable Trapping is supported by your Fiery Server, you have full control over the trapping settings used by
the Auto Trapping print option. The factory default settings of the Fiery Server are optimized for the copier/printer
using regular paper. Many jobs print satisfactorily with the default trapping settings, but if they do not provide the
results necessary for the media that you use, configure the trapping settings to meet your requirements.
For more information about Auto Trapping, see Color Printing, which is part of the user documentation set.
2 For Trap Width, specify the horizontal and vertical widths. Or, if you want to force the values to be equal, select
the link icon displayed between the horizontal and vertical values. If the values are different when you select the
link icon, the higher of the two values is used for both.
• Horizontal - Defines the horizontal thickness of the trapped areas (0-10 pixels).
• Vertical - Defines the vertical thickness of the trapped areas (0-10 pixels).
The bitmap image provides a dynamic visual example of the selected values.
1 In Device Center, click the Color Setup tab and click Trapping.
2 Under Trap Color Reduction, specify the values for the color channels:
The icon to the left of each color provides a visual example of the selected value.
• Trap Objects to Images - Trapping is applied to boundary areas between objects and images.
• Trap Images Internally - Trapping is applied to every individual pixel of an image. This option is available only
when you select Trap Objects to Images.
Progressives
The term “progressives” refers to printing any combination of the C, M, Y, and K separations in a multi-color
document. If the Progressives feature is supported by your Fiery Server, you can use it to diagnose problems in a job.
Most printing processes involving more than one or two colorants apply the colorants sequentially. Traditionally,
progressives are the intermediate states after some and before all colorants have been applied. The Progressives
feature lets you select which combinations of colors to print (up to four per original document page).
The sequence for Progressives does not have to represent the actual sequence applied by the printer. A different
sequence may be useful for analyzing the image composition.
With Progressives, you can see the influence of trapping, check the halftone interaction between two colorants,
verify registration of two plates relative to each other, and see the color separation parameters (making it easy, for
example, to visualize the GCR level when only the black plate, or all but the black plate are printed).
The Progressives feature shows the color separations used by the job when printed to the copier/printer. The feature
is not intended to be used to proof for another printer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 192
Graphic arts tools
You can configure Progressives settings and then select the Progressives print option when you print a job. The job is
printed as separations in the sequence specified.
You cannot print a job with Progressives and Postflight at the same time. A constraint is set for these print options.
ImageViewer edits to separations do not affect Progressives. If you turn off one or more separations of a job in
ImageViewer and then print the job with Progressives turned on, the job is printed with the values specified for
Progressives.
2 In the Progressives window, specify the color channels for each sheet, select the sheets to print, and click Apply.
At least one colorant (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, or Black) must be selected for each sheet and at least one sheet
must be selected.
For advanced proofing purposes, the Halftone Simulation feature offers user-controlled halftone generation. For
halftone resolutions that are lower than the copier/printer resolution, halftoned proofs can simulate the dots on
films or plates for offset printing that result from screening an image.
You can select preset halftone screens to print jobs with good results. If Halftone Simulation is supported by your
Fiery Server, you can define custom screening functions applied to your print job. The Fiery Server may also support
different frequency values for each color channel.
When color accuracy is more important than dot simulation, make sure that the Fiery Server is calibrated using the
particular halftone screen you use and that the output profile you print with is also matched to the halftone screen.
Changing a halftone screen usually modifies the color response of the copier/printer.
When dot simulation is more important than color accuracy, print with no CMYK simulation (with the CMYK/
Grayscale Source set to Bypass Conversion or None).
2 In the Halftone Simulation window, specify the angle and frequency for each color channel (Cyan, Magenta,
Yellow, and Black), and dot shape for a custom halftone screen.
You can customize a dot shape if the standard dot shapes do not meet your needs.
1 In the Edit Dot Shape window, select a predefined shape from the Template list.
The PostScript function for the shape appears in the text field.
2 Modify the shape by editing the PostScript function, and then click Preview to view it.
3 Change the size of the preview by moving the Area Coverage slider.
4 Save the custom shape and close the window by clicking OK.
The Paper Simulation feature renders paper white as a printed color in the output, rather than leaving white areas of
the page unprinted. White point editing allows you to adjust the hue, brightness, and saturation of the simulated
paper white, which is defined in a CMYK source profile as the white point.
Many jobs print satisfactorily with the default white point setting used by the Paper Simulation print option. If Paper
Simulation with white point editing is supported by your Fiery Server, you can customize the white point if necessary
to achieve the result that you want.
Note: If you print a job with Paper Simulation, and you have defined a substitute color as C=0, M=0, Y=0, K=0, the
values defined in Substitute Colors override those for Paper Simulation.
select the customized CMYK source profile and its linked output profile to see the effect of the Paper Simulation
White Point editing.
If you want to preserve the existing CMYK source profile, make a copy of it before editing the white point. You can
copy a profile by exporting it and then importing it with a different name.
Note: You can edit the white point of a CMYK source profile but not an output profile.
If you have a spectrophotometer (such as an ES-2000), you can import measured color values directly. This feature
allows you to target a match based on the actual color of the paper. To use a spectrophotometer, install and set up
the spectrophotometer before you begin editing the white point.
Note: To use an X-Rite i1Pro 2, you must use an instrument obtained from EFI.
3 Select the output profile to link with this CMYK source profile and click OK.
Note: When you print a job with the custom profile, you must select the same output profile.
4 Make sure that the correct monitor profile for your monitor is displayed under Monitor Profile. If the correct
monitor profile is not selected, select the correct monitor profile in Fiery Command WorkStation Preferences.
5 To measure a new white point using a spectrophotometer, click the spectrophotometer icon.
6 Place the spectrophotometer in its calibration cradle and click Calibrate. Calibration improves the accuracy of
measurements.
7 Place the spectrophotometer over the target color, making sure to center the sample aperture over the color.
8 Press the button on the spectrophotometer to take the measurement. The measured CMYK values are imported
into the CMYK fields, and the corresponding Lab values are displayed.
9 Alternatively, or additionally, you can edit the Hue, Brightness, and Saturation values manually.
11 If the test page looks correct, click Save and close the Paper Simulation White Point dialog box.
Fiery Command WorkStation 195
Graphic arts tools
Preflight
You can use the Preflight feature to check a job before printing, to reduce costly printing errors. Preflight checks the
most common areas of error to ensure that a job will print successfully and to the expected quality on the selected
printer.
Preflight generates a report of errors as well as information about the job, including security settings, page size, and
color spaces.
Preflight checking can be enabled in Hot Folders and Virtual Printers as well as in Fiery Command WorkStation.
3 Select each category of error to check and specify any settings. Clear the check box to skip a particular category.
A skipped category is automatically given a Pass result.
5 Select Stop Preflight on first critical error if you want to stop running Preflight as soon as a critical error is
detected.
6 To save the settings as a new preset, select Save or Save As from the Preset list.
Fiery Command WorkStation 196
Graphic arts tools
ImageViewer
Fiery ImageViewer allows you to soft proof and edit colors or gray levels in a job before printing. You can use
ImageViewer to preview job placement, orientation, and content, as well as general color or grayscale accuracy.
ImageViewer displays the raster image of a processed job.
Color output
Unlike the Preview application, ImageViewer displays the job with the actual CMYK values that are sent to the
printer and therefore provides an accurate soft proof. The soft proof does not display the effects of calibration,
however, which can affect color.
You can edit the individual C, M, Y, and K response curves. You can save your edits and apply them to other color
jobs. You can also apply G7 calibration curves that were created using CHROMiX Curve2 or Curve3.
You can display the separation data for each process color independently or in combination with any other process
colors. If the job has Halftone Simulation settings, the preview shows a composite view of all separations at the dot
level. If you print pages from ImageViewer, the output includes composite color information for the separations that
are selected in ImageViewer.
Black-and-white output
ImageViewer allows you to adjust the gray levels in a job before printing. You make these adjustments visually, by
changing the response curve (a graphical representation of input vs. output density), and viewing the effect in a
preview of the job.
ImageViewer also allows you to install the response curve adjustments of the current job on the Fiery Server. The
same gray level adjustments are then applied to all jobs that are processed subsequently.
Start ImageViewer
You can start ImageViewer from a job in Fiery Command WorkStation.
Note: You can also start ImageViewer from Fiery Command WorkStation Preview.
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation Job Center, select a job that has been processed and held.
If needed, select Actions > Process and Hold to move a job to processed/held status.
1 To reposition the part of the image that shows in the preview, do one of the following:
The rotation applies only to the preview, not the printed job.
3 To enlarge the area of the image preview, click View > Full Screen.
The thumbnails and the viewer controls are hidden and can be made to appear by moving the cursor to the left
and right sides of the screen, respectively.
To return to the normal display, press the Esc key.
Note: If the job has Halftone Simulation settings and the zoom is set at 100% or higher, the halftone dot pattern
and shape are displayed. Depending on the frequency of the dot pattern, a dot will consist of several pixels.
2 To zoom out so that the entire page fits in the image preview, click the Fit in Window icon next to the zoom
control or select View > Fit in Window
3 To display a magnified view of the area around the cursor location that moves with the cursor, click the Magnifier
icon or select View > Magnifier.
Fiery Command WorkStation 198
Graphic arts tools
• To control which separations appear, select or clear the check box next to the separation name in the
Separations pane.
• To invert the current selection of separations, select View > Separations > Invert Selection.
Inverting a selection makes unselected separations the new selection. For example, if CMYK separations are
available and Cyan and Magenta are selected, inverting the selection displays Yellow and Black.
• To quickly display all separations, choose View > Separations > Select All.
Note: After you make curve edits for a color job, save the job before you switch to the Color Wheel tab. Otherwise,
all of your curve edits are lost.
1 For a color job, click the Curves tab in the Color Adjust pane.
• To show or hide a color curve, click the eye icon below the specific color block.
• To select a specific color curve, click its color block, which brings the curve to the front.
• Use the Page Up and Page Down keys to switch between the curves.
Fiery Command WorkStation 199
Graphic arts tools
1 For a color job, click the Curves tab in the Color Adjust pane and then click Edit Curve.
• To display a predefined set of rows, select the set from the Control Points list.
• To add a row, type in the empty row.
• To delete a row, click anywhere in the row and click Delete Row.
Note: The edits that you make using the color wheel are kept if you switch to the Curves tab. But edits that you make
using curves are lost if you switch to the Color Wheel tab without first saving the job.
2 Click a tonal range (Highlights, Overall, or Shadows) to set the tonal range for the edit.
Note: The tonal range selection does not apply to Brightness. Brightness always applies to the entire tonal range.
3 To edit hue and saturation, click a new location inside the color wheel.
The image preview changes to show the result of the edit.
4 Fine-tune the edit by dragging the sliders for Hue, Saturation, Black, or Brightness, or type a new numeric value to
the right of the slider.
Fiery Command WorkStation 200
Graphic arts tools
Note: The response curve under Curve Edit is not the response curve of the Fiery Server. In a processed job, the gray
levels have already been converted by the Fiery Server.
1 Move the cursor in the image to an area of gray that you want to adjust.
An image may contain many levels of gray in a small area. Make sure that you enlarge the image enough to locate
the desired gray precisely.
3 Move the selected point to the desired location using the arrow keys (Up for darker, Down for lighter) to adjust
the response curve.
Note: For some types of Fiery Server, you can also save color edits as a server preset and apply the preset to a
different job.
3 Browse to the location where you want to save the file and save it.
Fiery Command WorkStation 201
Graphic arts tools
3 Click Open.
The color edits are applied to the current page.
Note: You can also save color edits to a local file on your computer and apply them to a different job in
ImageViewer.
1 In the Color Adjust pane, make the edits that you want to save.
2 Click the Curves tab and click Preset > Save As.
1 In the Color Adjust pane, click the Curves tab and select the preset in the Preset list.
1 In Fiery Command WorkStation Job Center, select a held job and click Actions > Properties.
2 Click the Color tab, select the preset in the ImageViewer curves option, and click OK.
3 With the same job selected, click Actions > Process and Hold.
The color edits of the preset are applied to the processed job.
Note: After the job is processed, the color edits are incorporated in the job and no longer appear as edits in
ImageViewer.
Fiery Command WorkStation 202
Graphic arts tools
Delete a preset
1 In the Color Adjust pane, select the preset in the Preset list.
The preset is applied to the image.
2 Click the Preset list and select Delete, and then click Yes to confirm.
The preset is removed from the list and from the image.
1 Click the Curves tab in the Color Adjust pane, and then click Edit Curve.
2 Click Import Curve, locate and select the file that contains the curve, and click Open.
3 Browse to the location where you want to save the file and save it.
Note: You will lose any changes you have made to the current job when you import a curve from a file.
3 Click Open.
Fiery Command WorkStation 203
Graphic arts tools
1 For each page in a color job, set the separations in the Separations pane that you want to print.
Note: The soft proof does not display the effects of calibration, which can affect color.
The resolution of the soft proof can be different from the resolution of the job, since the soft proof is not intended
for printing.
2 Specify the page range. Use commas to separate page numbers or page ranges.
4 Click OK.
5 Type a name for the file. The file type is always PDF.
6 Browse to the location where you want to save the file, and click Save.
Note: If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you can click Create a Monitor Profile in
ImageViewer Preferences to create a new monitor profile in Fiery Monitor Profiler.
• In ImageViewer, select View > Compare Monitor Profile with Output Profile.
Fiery Command WorkStation 204
Graphic arts tools
Important: If you install curve edits on the Fiery Server and then later decide that you want to install a different
set of curve edits, be sure to restore the factory default state before you create the new curve edits.
2 Click OK to confirm.
2 Click OK to confirm.
1 Select Edit > Preferences (Windows) or ImageViewer > Preferences (Mac OS).
• Units - Sets the units for displaying the dimensions and resolution.
• 'Clear' Separation Display Settings - If the Fiery Server supports a clear varnish separation in addition to C, M,
Y, and K separations, use this setting to specify Mask Color and Opacity of the clear separation as shown in
ImageViewer.
• Cross Hair Color Picker - Click the color block to select the color of the bounding box in the Navigator pane.
• Monitor Profile - Either displays the operating system setting for the monitor profile or allows you to select the
monitor profile. To obtain an accurate soft proof, use a profile that is accurate for your monitor.
If Fiery Color Profiler Suite is installed on your computer, you can click Create a Monitor Profile to create a new
monitor profile in Fiery Monitor Profiler.
Fiery Command WorkStation 205
Booklet Maker
Booklet Maker
Booklet Maker is an imposition feature that allows you to print multiple pages of a print job in a booklet style
without relying on more advanced imposition programs.
Imposition is the process of printing multiple pages on single sheets of paper. When the imposed sheets are folded
together as signatures, the pages follow in sequential or reading order.
Booklet Maker is designed for 2-up imposition, which imposes four individual pages from your document on a single
sheet that is printed duplex, where two document pages are printed on each side of a single sheet of paper. It is
capable of imposing jobs from nearly any application.
The order in which pages are imposed is determined by the binding method you select.
You can access Booklet Maker from the printer driver or from Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties. You can
work with Booklet Maker in two ways:
• Using the Booklet Maker wizard - Recommended for first-time or novice users
• Specifying settings in the main Booklet Maker window - Recommended for experienced or advanced users
Note: If you have accessed Booklet Maker from the printer driver, note that Mixed Media with 1-up perfect binding
is not supported in the printer driver. To use this feature, you must send your job to the Hold queue in Fiery
Command WorkStation.
This Help describes 2-up imposition layouts. If your printer is equipped with an advanced finisher, such as a Perfect
binder, see Printing, which is part of the user documentation set, for additional options.
Note: To use the full functionality of Fiery Impose, you must have an active license for the application. Otherwise,
Fiery Impose is available for use in demo mode, which means that jobs are saved with a watermark.
For more information about Fiery Impose, see the Fiery JobMaster Help.
Fiery Command WorkStation 206
Booklet Maker
You can access Booklet Maker from the printer driver or from Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties.
Create a booklet
When you select Booklet in the Layout tab of Job Properties (in Fiery Command WorkStation) or the printer driver,
Booklet Maker dynamically displays all of the controls applicable to creating a booklet. You can use the main Booklet
Maker window or the Booklet Maker wizard, which displays images for each step, to complete the process.
Fiery Command WorkStation 207
Booklet Maker
Note: If your printer is equipped with an advanced finisher, such as a Perfect binder, the option of 1-up Perfect
binding may be available.
• Select from Paper Catalog (if Paper Catalog is supported on the Fiery Server).
• Create a custom paper size.
• Select Same as document size.
5 Select a Shrink to fit setting to scale down the pages of your document while preserving the aspect ratio of the
original document.
6 Select page alignment settings to determine the placement of the page image on the page.
To compensate for creep (available for Saddle and Nested Saddle booklets), select the setting for your media type:
• Plain - Select this option for booklets with a large number of pages.
• Thick - Select this option for booklets printed on thick or heavyweight media. You must also specify the
desired thick or heavy media in the printer driver or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties (Media tab).
8 Click OK to save your settings or select a Print setting to print or process the job.
Note: If Saddle or Nested Saddle are selected for Booklet Type, specify cover settings and content. If Nested
Saddle is selected, specify number of sheets in a subset.
Fiery Command WorkStation 208
Booklet Maker
6 Click Finish to save your booklet, Back to change any settings, or Cancel to cancel the job.
Booklet type
When creating a booklet you select the Booklet Type option and choose the binding method and binding edge.
The binding method determines the way the job is imposed. The binding edge determines the placement of the
spine, the layout orientation, and any rotation of page content in your booklet.
Binding methods
Booklet Maker supports the following binding methods:
Binding edge
Booklet Maker has three binding edge options:
• Left Binding - Typically used for languages that read from left to right. The booklet opens from right to left.
• Right Binding - Typically used for languages that read from right to left. The booklet opens from left to right.
• Top Binding - Typically used for calendars, landscape- and cinema-size documents. The booklet opens upward.
With top binding that includes a cover, the outside of the back cover automatically rotates 180 degrees to match
the orientation of the front cover.
Left-edge binding
1 Front
2 Back
Fiery Command WorkStation 209
Booklet Maker
1 Front
2 Back
1 Front
2 Back
Saddle binding
Saddle binding, also called saddle-stitch binding, is the simplest binding method. In Saddle binding, the signatures
are folded together as a group, and then stapled or stitched along the center fold, or spine. In Saddle booklets, creep
is a factor.
Saddle binding includes pre-printed and inline cover options.
The following illustration shows the imposition signatures for a 12-page document imposed for left-edge saddle
binding:
Fiery Command WorkStation 210
Booklet Maker
1 Signature 3
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 1
The following illustration shows how the signatures of a 12-page saddle booklet are folded together as a group:
1 12
1 Signature 1
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 3
The following illustration shows how the signatures are stitched or stapled along the common fold:
1 Subset 1
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 1
4 Subset 2
5 Signature 4
6 Signature 3
The following illustration shows how the signatures of a 16-page Nested Saddle booklet are folded and the subsets
grouped together. Subset 1 includes Signatures 1 and 2; Subset 2 includes Signatures 3 and 4:
1 16
1 Signature 1
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 3
4 Signature 4
The following illustration shows how the subsets are joined together along the common fold for the nested saddle,
left-edge binding, booklet:
Fiery Command WorkStation 212
Booklet Maker
Perfect binding
In Perfect binding the signatures are folded individually and stacked along the common fold, which forms the spine
of the booklet.
A signature is a press sheet that is folded to form the pages of a booklet in sequential order. Each signature in a
booklet is folded in the same way. The Perfect binding process is more involved (the spine must be roughened to
flatten before it is glued to the cover) and tends to require a larger gutter. In Perfect booklets, creep is not a factor.
The following illustration shows perfect, left-edge binding imposition for a 12-page document:
1 Signature 1
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 3
The following illustration shows how perfect signatures are folded individually, and how the signatures are joined
together at the common fold:
1 12
1 Signature 1
2 Signature 2
3 Signature 3
The following illustration shows how the signatures are joined together at the common fold for the perfect, left-edge
binding booklet:
Fiery Command WorkStation 213
Booklet Maker
Paper size is the actual size of the sheet of paper (unfolded) on which your booklet will print.
When you select a paper size for your booklet, you have several choices:
• Select from Paper Catalog (if Paper Catalog is supported on the Fiery Server)
• Create a custom paper size
• Select Same as document size
Document size
Document size refers to the size of each page in your original document and is defined in your application’s Print
Setup (or Page Setup) dialog box. In designing your booklet, it may be useful to think of document size as the digital
input (the page size defined in your original document), and paper size as the physical output (the dimensions of the
actual piece of paper in the printer tray).
Note: The size defined in your application's formatting menu may differ from the size defined in your application’s
Print Setup (or Page Setup) dialog box. The size that is relevant to Booklet Maker is defined in your application's
Print Setup (or Page Setup) dialog box.
Edge feed
Edge feed is the side of the paper that first enters the printer. The feed direction (short-edge feed or long-edge feed)
is associated with certain paper sizes.
When you select a Document size in Print Setup (or Page Setup), it is not necessary to consider the edge feed
associated with the paper size you select. However, the finisher may require edge feed in a certain direction. In
Booklet Maker, paper sizes with feed direction that are not supported by the finisher are dimmed in the list of
available sizes.
Fiery Command WorkStation 214
Booklet Maker
1 8 1
1 11 in.
2 8.5 in.
3 11 in.
4 17 in.
Or an A4-size document (297x210 mm) prints on A3 paper (297x420 mm). The document size (the input) is shown
on the left, the paper size (output) is shown on the right in the illustration below::
1 8 1
1 297 mm
2 210 mm
3 297 mm
4 420 mm
Note: The above examples illustrate paper sizes within the same series (A4 to A3) or standard (Letter to Tabloid).
Booklet Maker can also impose from one series to another (for example, A4 to Letter). For more information, see
Page alignment on page 220.
For example, if your document size is 8.5x11 in. and you select 8.5x11 in. from the Paper size menu for 2-up
imposition, the document pages are scaled down to fit two 5.5x8.5 in. side-by-side pages. The illustration below
shows the document size (input) on the left, and the paper size (the output) on the right:
8 1
1
1 11 in.
2 8.5 in.
3 8.5 in.
4 11 in.
Or, if your document size is A4 (297x210 mm) and you select A4 from the Paper size menu, the document pages are
scaled down to fit two 210x148.5 mm side-by-side pages. The illustration below shows the document size (input) on
the left, and the paper size (the output) on the right:
8 1
1
1 297 mm
2 210 mm
3 210 mm
4 297 mm
Note: The Shrink to fit option only reduces or scales down the document page size. Shrink to fit does not scale up or
enlarge. For more information, see Shrink to fit option on page 215.
If document size is less than or equal (<) to one-half paper size 100%
Fiery Command WorkStation 216
Booklet Maker
If document size is greater than (>) one-half paper size Shrink to fit
Note: The Shrink to fit option only reduces or scales down the document page size. Shrink to fit does not scale up or
enlarge.
The Shrink to fit menu offers three options:
• Sheet Size (default): makes maximum use of the sheet size by scaling the content (image) to the edge of the sheet.
• Imageable Area: scales the content (image) so it fits within the imageable area of the sheet.
• Off: does not scale the content.
3 Result - 13x19 in. document scaled to fit one-half paper size (8.5x11 in.)
1 1
1 1
3 Result - 13x19 in. document scaled to fit one-half paper size (8.5x11 in.)
The example below shows differing or non-standard sizes for the Shrink to Fit > Imageable Area option.
An A4 document is scaled down to fit Letter-size paper, which equals 5.5x8.5 in (one-half of an 8.5x11 in./Letter-size
sheet of paper):
Fiery Command WorkStation 218
Booklet Maker
1 1
1 1
1
4
3 Before clipping
The Shrink to Fit option offers two ways of shrinking your document pages - shrink to fit the sheet size, or shrink to
fit the imageable area.
Each of the Shrink to Fit options has its pros and cons.
Shrink to Fit - Sheet Size maximizes the usage of the paper size during calculation of the scaling factor. However,
because of the layout of the content in the original document, the scaling may not produce the desired result.
Clipping of the content may occur.
Shrink to Fit - Imageable Area uses the imageable area of the paper size so no clipping of the content will occur.
However, the document content will be scaled down more than with the sheet size selection.
See below for an illustration of the effects of the different choices.
The first image shows two documents, both with the same page size, but with different layout.
8.5 8.5
11
11
The second image shows the sheet with the imageable area displayed in white.
11
8.5
The third image shows the effect of selecting the Shrink to Fit - Sheet Size option. Although the document with large
margins fits within the imageable area, the document with small margins will have content clipped when imposed
and printed.
Fiery Command WorkStation 220
Booklet Maker
The fourth image shows what happens when you select Shrink to Fit - Imageable Area for the document with the
small margins. All the content will be printed, but you end up with larger margins (more white space) on the top and
bottom edges.
Page alignment
Page alignment does not alter the page layout defined in your original document. Page alignment shifts the entire
page content, which is the printable area (the space assigned to the text and images) plus margins (the white or blank
space surrounding the printable area).
Booklet Maker has three options to position and fine-tune the placement of page content:
• Align pages - Use this option to align page content with the spine or to center on the page.
• Increase gutters by - Adds extra space (gutters) to allow for binding.
• Compensate creep - Use this option to counteract the shift in page content that occurs in Saddle and Nested
Saddle booklets.
Note: The page alignment options do not change the scale factor. When you set the Shrink to fit option to Off,
clipping occurs if the document extends beyond the edge of the paper. If clipping is not your intent, you can use the
Align pages and Gutter options to adjust the position of page content.
Align pages
In the context of Booklet Maker, the Align pages option defines the initial position of page content (At the center or
At the spine), which can then be further adjusted by increasing the gutter value.
The Align pages option controls the initial position of page content, either at the spine or at the center.
• Select Booklet in the Layout tab of Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties and follow the prompts to set the
Align pages option.
• At the spine (default) - Aligns document page content flush with the spine, at the center of the sheet where the
fold will occur.
AA
• At the center - positions document page content at the center of one-half of the sheet size.
Fiery Command WorkStation 221
Booklet Maker
A A
You can choose to align pages with the Shrink to Fit option On (enabled) or Off (disabled).
A AA A A
The following illustration shows page alignment when the document size is equal to one-half of the paper size, in
which case there is no visible difference:
A AA AA
1 Document size = one-half paper size
Note: When the document size is greater than one-half of the paper size and Shrink to fit is On, the final printed
result is determined by the aspect ratio of the original document.
The following illustrates page alignment At the center when the document size is greater than (>) one-half of the
paper size, and Shrink to fit is Off:
Fiery Command WorkStation 223
Booklet Maker
Note: The value specified for gutter does not change the page margins or layout defined in your original document.
The gutter is an extra margin intended to allow space for binding.
For the supported range of gutter values for your printer, see Printing.
A AA AA
A A A A
1 Document size < one-half paper size
A A A A
A A A A
1 Document size < one-half paper size
Fiery Command WorkStation 225
Booklet Maker
2 Paper size
Note: As you increase the gutter, the page content may be clipped if it reaches the edge of the sheet or the non-
imageable area of the paper.
Compensate creep
Creep occurs in booklets with saddle binding or nested saddle binding printed on heavy media, or with a large
number of pages. Use Compensate creep to counteract the effects of creep.
As the sheets are folded to create signatures (folded sheets that form the pages of a booklet), each fold causes a small
incremental shift in the location of the page content. The result is that the outer margins become narrower toward
the center of the booklet when the booklet is trimmed. The page content may be clipped or printed too close to the
outer edge.
1 Creep
You can specify Mixed Media settings in Booklet Maker in Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties only for 1-
up perfect binding jobs. The Mixed Media enhancement integrates a Mixed Media dialog and viewer into the
Booklet Maker window.
Note: Mixed Media with 1-up perfect binding is not supported in the printer driver. To use this feature, you must
send your job to the Hold queue in Fiery Command WorkStation.
The Mixed Media viewer presents the actual pagination of the final product, providing a real-time representation of
the selections made in the Mixed Media dialog. You can view the layout of jobs as either pages or as sheets.
Fiery Command WorkStation 226
Booklet Maker
In Mixed Media for Booklet Maker 1-up Perfect binding, you can specify:
• Chapter starts - When a chapter start is designated in a duplex job, implicit blanks are inserted.
• Page ranges and media for the page ranges.
• Blank inserts and media for the inserts - Blank inserts specified by the user are explicit blanks. Explicit and
implicit blanks have different designations in the Mixed Media viewer.
Note: Tab insert and cover definition settings cannot be specified in Booklet Maker Mixed Media.
When you use Mixed Media in Booklet Maker, it is disabled in the Media tab. Selections made in Booklet Maker will
be displayed subsequently in the Media tab and in Fiery Compose.
1 Select your job in Fiery Command WorkStation Job Center and open Job Properties.
Note: Define Cover is not available as a Mixed Media choice in Booklet Maker. Cover definitions are created
using the standard Booklet Maker options.
7 Scroll down to the Mixed Media viewer and specify settings using the following controls:
• Pages tab - Click to display layout of booklet organized by document pages of document and to show
relationship to sheets.
• Sheets tab - Click to display layout of booklet organized by sheets and to show relationship to pages.
• Chapter Start Page(s) field - Type page numbers that you designate as chapter starts, with commas in between.
Chapter start pages are designated in viewer by a marker. Implicit blanks are inserted as needed. The graphic
below shows the chapter start marker and the implicit blank inserted after page 10.
• New Page Range - Click icon or button to type page numbers and then apply media settings to specified page
range.
Fiery Command WorkStation 227
Booklet Maker
• New Insert - Click the icon or button to insert a blank page at specific location and apply media settings to
insert.
• Edit - Click the icon or button to modify Page Range or New Insert media settings.
• Delete - Click the icon or button to delete Page Range or New Insert settings.
For information about the media settings that apply for your Fiery Server, see Printing and Utilities in the user
documentation set.
• Scroll bars.
• Standard navigational arrows - Click the inner arrows to move backward or forward to the adjacent page in
the sequence. Click the outer arrows to move to the beginning or end of the document. Arrows are disabled if
there is no possible navigation.
• Action navigational arrows - Click the arrows to move to the next action in the sequence, either forward or
backward. The text field displays the action. Arrows are disabled if there is no possible navigation.
The illustration shows a job viewed as pages. The number after “Pages” on the tab indicates the number of document
pages, which are represented by the thumbnails in the top row. The pages are presented in linear order,
corresponding to the logical reading order of the source document.
The second row shows how the sheets will be ordered on the copier/printer. The content of the front cover, which in
this example comprises the first two pages of the document, is displayed in reading order at the beginning. The back
cover content, at the end of the job, can be displayed by used the scroll bar or the other navigation tools.
The thumbnails in the top row represent the actual print order on the printer. The second row shows which pages
will be printed on which sheets. For example, in the following illustration, the cover sheet includes the content of the
first two pages of the document as the front cover, the content of the third last page as the spine, and the content of
the last two pages of the document as the back cover.
Note: The cover is always displayed first, even if the cover is output as the last sheet on certain printers.
Fiery Command WorkStation 229
Booklet Maker
• Inserting pages before, between, or after the document pages whose content is allocated for the cover.
• Inserting any pages outside of what will be the finished, bound book.
• Inserting any pages that physically split the cover.
• Specifying media of different sizes in one job. The media size selection for New Page Range and New Insert is
limited to the same size as the body signature.
Note: Copiers/Printers that support half-Z-fold insertion allow media sizes two times the size of the body signature.
Add a cover
In Booklet Maker, you can add a cover to Saddle booklets and specify media for the cover.
For Saddle booklets only, Booklet Maker includes two cover options, either pre-printed or inline, for which you can
specify media. You can specify additional options for an inline cover. If your copier/printer is equipped with an
advanced finisher, such as a Perfect binder, see Printing, which is part of the user documentation set, for additional
cover options.
1 In the Layout > Booklet tab of the printer driver or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties, select Saddle for
Booklet Type and select a binding edge.
2 Specify the settings for Paper Size and Page Alignment for the body of the booklet.
• To insert a pre-printed cover, select Pre-Printed. The pre-printed cover will be merged with the body pages of
your booklet, which print separately. If you select this option, the Front Cover and Back Cover options are
disabled.
• To specify an inline cover, select Front & Back Separately. Specifying this option prints the cover pages and
body pages as a single job. Separate pages from your document are imposed on a single sheet that forms the
cover of your booklet.
You can specify an inline cover when your original document includes the cover pages and/or cover artwork
for your booklet. The cover content may be the first and last pages of your document, or the first two and last
two pages of your document, or any combination. If you select this option, you can specify the Front Cover and
Back Cover options.
• Front Cover and Back Cover (Inline covers only) - These options allow you to quickly decide whether your front
and back covers print duplex (on both sides of the sheet), single-sided, or both sides blank, without needing to
add blank pages in your original document.
Note: When you print an inline cover with top-edge binding, the outside back cover automatically rotates 180
degrees to match the orientation of the front cover.
4 Click Define Cover to open the Cover Media settings window, to specify media, size, and source tray. This option
is available for both pre-printed and inline covers.
5 Specify the media and paper size for the pre-printed insert, or for your inline covers.
Fiery Command WorkStation 230
Booklet Maker
6 Select the tray that contains the pre-printed inserts or inline covers, and click OK.
Change the size of your original document in the Print Setup of the application in which you created the document.
Before you change the document size, to make sure your copier/printer supports the paper size.
1 Open your original document and choose File > Print Setup (or File > Page Setup).
3 Select from the list of available paper sizes, and click OK.
Note: When you select a paper size from the available list, you do not need to consider the edge feed of the paper.
Note: In the printer driver, it is not possible to change the unit of measurement.
3 Select the unit of measurement (millimeters, points, or inches), and click OK.
Note: Changes are not effective until the next time Fiery Command WorkStation is started.
Preview a booklet
Note: It is not possible to preview jobs when working with Booklet Maker in the printer driver.
• In the Fiery Command WorkStation Held list in Job Center, select your print job and select Actions > Preview.
• If the job is spooled and held, the job is displayed in the Preview window.
• If the job is processed and held, the job is displayed in the Raster Preview window.
Fiery Command WorkStation 231
Booklet Maker
The Booklet Maker workflow examples provide an overview of the steps to create the three standard types of booklet
using the wizard: Perfect, Saddle, and Nested Saddle.
3 Select the Booklet Type and Binding edge, and then click Next.
5 Set the page alignment and gutter value (optional) and click Next.
6 Review the settings summary to confirm your booklet settings and click Finish to return to the Layout > Booklet
tab in the printer driver or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties.
7 Set other print options (optional) and finishing options (such as folding, stapling, or binding) in the printer driver
or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties, and then click OK.
3 Select the Booklet Type, the Binding edge, and then click Next.
5 If you selected Front & Back Separately for cover source and content, specify how you want to print the cover:
Front and Back; Outside and Inside. Then click Next.
6 If you selected Insert for cover source and content, click Next.
8 In the Cover Media settings window, specify media, size, and source tray.
10 Set the page alignment, gutter value, and creep compensation (optional).
Fiery Command WorkStation 232
Booklet Maker
11 Review the settings summary to confirm your booklet settings and click Finish to return to the Layout > Booklet
tab in the printer driver or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties.
12 Set other print options (optional) and finishing options (such as folding, stapling, or binding), and then click OK.
3 Select the Booklet Type and Binding edge, and then click Next.
4 Select the Paper Size and the number of sheets in a subset, and click Next.
5 Set page alignment, gutter value, and creep compensation (optional), and then click Next.
6 Review the settings summary to confirm your booklet settings and click Finish to return to the Layout > Booklet
tab in the printer driver or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties.
7 Set other print options (optional) and finishing options (such as folding, stapling, or binding) in the printer driver
or Fiery Command WorkStation Job Properties, and then click OK.
Booklet Maker has constraints related to PDF files, queue type, and other limitations.
Secured PDF
Adobe PDF files can be saved with security settings that restrict opening, printing, or editing the PDF file (a
“Restricted Document”). Restricted Documents cannot be printed using Booklet Maker.
Queue type
Booklet Maker does not support jobs sent to the Direct queue. Booklet Maker print jobs must be sent to the Hold
queue or Print queue.
2-up imposition Prints two document pages on each side of a single sheet of paper.
Administrator Has full access to all Fiery Command WorkStation and Fiery Server control
panel functions. Administrator password is required.
Alignment Alignment controls allow you to specify the placement of a page within its
predefined slot on the sheet. For example, if a page has been scaled smaller
than the slot, you can align the page to the top-left corner of the slot by
clicking the control that corresponds to that position.
aspect ratio Relationship of width to height. In general, portrait equals a width less than
(<) the height. Landscape equals a width greater than (>) the height.
Back Color Profile Choose the default color profile that will be applied only to the back side of
your media. This attribute can be overridden by specifying a different color
profile in Job Properties.
bleed Extension of the content beyond a trim mark, used to ensure that the
printed area extends to the very edge of a trimmed page.
clipping indicators Appear when specified scaling values will cause the page to print beyond the
edge of the sheet. When the window is in Layout mode, any clipped page
edge is highlighted in yellow. When the window is in Preview mode, the
Clipping icon appears to the left of the Scale Factor field. Also, the page
preview shows content truncating at the edge of the sheet.
creep Creep, or binder's creep, is the shift of the content area caused by the
incremental fold of signatures in Saddle and Nested Saddle binding.
creep adjustment Compensates automatically for binder's creep when saddle-stitched binding
is specified.
Creep Adjustment menu The Creep Adjustment menu is used to compensate automatically for
binder's creep when saddle-stitched binding is specified.
Custom Custom enables the Scale Factor and Finished Height and Width fields, so
that you can specify new scaling values. The original height and width values
are displayed for reference. When you specify a value, Impose automatically
updates the other fields to preserve the height-to-width aspect ratio of the
page.
edge feed The side of the paper that first enters the printer.
finisher Any device designed for the after-printing process, such as folding, stapling,
or binding.
Fit Height Scales page(s) to fill the height of each page slot on the sheet.
Fit Width Scales page(s) to fill the width of each page slot on the sheet.
Fixed Page Fixed Page mode allows you to impose documents that contain pages of the
same size.
Front Color Profile The default color profile that will be applied only to the front side of your
media. This attribute can be overridden by specifying a different color
profile in Job Properties.
Guest Can download, view job status, edit preferences, change layouts, but cannot
access the Job Log, or make changes to Fiery Server Setup. No password is
required.
gutter An additional margin that allows space for binding or other finishing
options (not to be confused with page margins).
imageable area Area of the paper where marks can actually be made.
inline cover Front and/or back cover matter that is printed with the body pages in the
same job.
job label Stores descriptive text used for the job name, sheet information, and date
and time.
Layout view Layout view mode displays numbered, generic pages that allow you to
determine the location of source document pages in the imposed jobs. You
can rotate individual pages in a layout view.
left edge Specifies binding across the left edge of the booklet. The booklet reads from
left to right.
margins White or blank space surrounding the printable area. Margins may vary
within a document.
Media Color Profile The default color profile that will be applied to both the front and back sides
of your media. This attribute can be overridden by specifying a different
color profile in Job Properties.
Mixed Page Mixed Page mode allows you to impose documents that contain pages of
different sizes.
nested saddle binding A combination of saddle and perfect binding methods. As with saddle
binding, the signatures are folded together as a group, which forms a subset.
The subsets are then stacked on top of one another and glued, as with
perfect binding.
Fiery Command WorkStation 235
Booklet Maker
offline finishing Cover matter printed separately and assembled with the body pages after
printing.
offsets Offsets values are calculated in reference to the alignment position, and
reset to zero when you specify a new alignment.
Operator Has access to all Job Center functions. In Device Center, does not have
access to Configure, Backup and Restore, changing passwords, and deleting
the Job Log. Can view Paper Catalog, virtual printers, and color
management functions, but cannot edit them. Operator password is
required.
Pan tool Allows you to drag the desired portion of the job into view.
perfect binding A group of individually folded signatures that are stacked along a common
fold for binding. The spine is flattened and glued together.
portrait In a portrait document, the width is less than (<) the height.
post-inserter tray A tray that allows input of any blank or pre-printed matter that bypasses the
printer fuser.
Preview view Preview view mode approximates the appearance of the final printed output.
It is sometimes called WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get).
printer's marks Designate the location of folds, cuts, margins, gutters, and bleeds. Printer's
marks appear on the printed sheet outside the main content area of the job.
printer's spread Shows pages in the order and layout in which they are printed as an imposed
job.
printing For a Fiery Server, printing refers to transferring the raster image from the
Fiery Server to the printer at high speed, freeing up RAM for the next job.
While the print job's file is usually saved to disk, raster images are held in
RAM during and after each print job. However, both users and operators
can request that the raster image is saved to disk along with the original
print job's file. Saving the raster image to disk offers some advantages -
raster files are already processed so they print quickly, and each part of the
raster file is still identified with a page in the original document, which
means that individual pages of a saved raster file can be accessed.
processed/held Processing a job, or RIPping a job, involves creating a raster file (raster
image) after spooling, in preparation for printing. A processed/held job is
kept in the Hold queue until sent to the printer.
reader's spread Shows pages in the order and layout in which they are intended to be read.
right edge Specifies binding across the right edge of the booklet. The booklet reads
from right to left.
RIPing RIP stands for Raster Image Processing. RIPing refers to sending the job
through the first part of the print process. Print option preferences specified
for the job are interpreted, and a raster image file created. In this raster file
Fiery Command WorkStation 236
Booklet Maker
(raster image), color data is associated with each dot that can be rendered on
the printer. The color data tells the printer whether or not to apply cyan,
magenta, yellow, or black toner to each position on the page.
saddle binding A group of folded sheets stitched or stapled on a common, centered fold
line. Saddle-stitched binding is the most basic type of binding and is the
most common for booklets.
Scale to Fit Scales page(s) to best fill the sheet without printing past its edge. Scale to Fit
is the default mode.
signature A press sheet that is folded to form the pages of a booklet in sequential
order. Each signature in a booklet is folded in the same way.
Size menu The Size menu includes items representing all page sizes defined by the
currently selected printer PostScript printer description (PPD) file.
spine Where the signatures are joined at the center fold and then stitched or
bound.
spooled/held Jobs are spooled and held on the Fiery Server in preparation for job
management by the operator. After the operator assigns a destination, the
job is spooled for processing.
spooling The job, a file sent for printing, is saved on the Fiery Server hard disk. The
file may arrive in packets from the network, or be loaded from a disk. Jobs
appear in the queue in the order they arrive, and generally move through the
print workflow in the same order unless an operator intervenes. If a job's
movement is suspended, it is held in the spool queue pending further
instruction. For this reason, the spool queue may also be known as the Hold
queue.
Index
% Recycled Content 164 column headers
Fiery Central 44
1-up perfect binding 213 Configure, defined 32
2-up imposition 205 configuring 45
connecting to server 18
Continuous format 167
A
about Paper Catalog 155 Continuous Long 169
accessing Booklet Maker 206 Continuous Short 169
access levels 18 cover
Actions menu 14 inline 209, 229
adding pre-printed 209, 229
servers 18 cover settings 207, 229, 231
aligning page content 220 creating new catalog entry 159
Allow Users to print without authentication 33 creep
Antique 168 compensating for 220, 225
attributes 163 definition of 225
authentication setting for many pages 207
allowing printing without 33 settings 207
automatic rotation 229 specifying 231, 232
automatic scaling 214, 215 Custom Color Name 164
custom page size 161
B
Back Coating 164 D
Back Gloss Value 164 database
balancing loads 47 exporting 161
basis weight 172 merging 162
binding edge 208 replacing 162
binding methods 208 resetting to defaults 163
binding options 207 Device Center 16
Booklet Maker settings 205 disconnecting server 20, 42
Booklet Maker wizard 205, 207, 231 DNS name 47
document size
changing in application 230
C maintaining 214
Calendered 168
Dull 168
Cardboard 169
duplex printing 205, 229
catalog entry
duplicating catalog entry 160
creating new 159
duplicating 160
editing 160 E
center editing catalog entry 160
aligning pages at 220, 221 Eggshell 168
CIE Lab Color 164 Embossed Linen 168
CIE Tint 164 English 168
CIE Whiteness 164 Envelope 169
clipping of page content Envelope Plain 169
how to avoid 220 Envelope Window 169
Cockle 168 exiting Configure 32
Color Name 164 exporting the database 161
Fiery Command WorkStation 238
Index
F about 66
factory defaults 163 overriding 67, 68
Felt 168 viewing 67
Fiery Central jobs
column headers 44 reordering 87
connecting to servers 42
customizing settings 44 L
Toolbar buttons 44 Labels 169
Fiery Central server Laid 168
configuration 45 left binding 209, 210, 212
setup 45 Letterhead 169
License Manager
previewing a job with 54 45
Fiery print controller, connecting to 206 Light Cockle 168
finishers 47 Linen 168
finishing options 205, 229, 231, 232 Line Printer Daemon - LPD 154
first-time use 205 load balancing 47
folding signatures 209, 210, 212 logging out 20, 42
fonts, importing 179 Long Edge Feed 167
Front Coating 164 Long grain 164
Front Gloss Value 164 Luster 168
Full Cut Tabs 169
M
G Machine Finished 168
Grain Direction 164 Mac OS computers 47, 49
groups Mac OS X
adding users to 34 Line Printer Daemon - LPD 154
changing privileges 36 mailboxes for scan users 35
removing users from 35 main window 14
gutter managing
definition of 223 fonts 179
specifying 231, 232 Matte 168
gutter measurements 223 measurement units
specifying 230
H media attributes 163
heavy media Media Back Color Profile 164
effects of printing on 225 Media Color Profile 164
Hole Type 164 Media Front Color Profile 164
Media Unit 167
I merging databases 162
imposition 205 Mottled 168
increasing gutters 220 Multi-Part Form 169
installable options 47
IP address 47 N
nested saddle 210
J nested saddle booklet settings 232
job
sending to a server 87 O
job center 14 Opacity Level % 164
Job Log Opaque 167
using 183 orientation 208
job properties overriding job properties 67, 68
Fiery Command WorkStation 239
Index
P R
Paper Association 173 raster preview 230
paper attributes 163 reading layout 205
Paper Catalog 47 rebooting Print Server 32
paper size Recycled Content 164
selecting 213–215 removing server 20
Paper Size 164 replacing the database 162
Parchment 168 resetting the database 163
perfect binding 212 Roll format 167
perfect booklet settings 231 rotation
Photographic 169 automatic 229
Plain 169
Pre Cut Tabs 169 S
Preferences saddle 209
Animation 24 saddle booklet settings 231
Application Language 24 saddle-stitch 209
Caching 24 Satin 168
Cube Rotation 24 scaling
Imposition Template Path 24 automatic 214, 215
Monitor Profile 24 Semi-Vellum 168
PS to PDF Conversion 24 server
Scale 24 changing user 20
setting 24 disconnecting 20, 42
Temporary Path 24 Set Count 164
Tooltips 24 setting
Units 24 job properties 67, 68
presets Preferences 24
deleting 73 print options 67, 68
renaming 73 settings
specifying 72 nested saddle 232
previewing perfect booklet 231
scrolling pages 54 saddle booklet 231
with 54 setup
printer driver 206 Printer Groups 47
Printer Groups setup of Print Server 32
options 51 sheet 205, 210
setup 47 Sheet format 167
printers 46 sheet size 213
printing defaults 46 shifting page content 220
print options, setting 67, 68 Short Edge Feed 167
print queues 47, 49 Short grain 164
print settings shrink to fit 215
choosing saved settings 72 Silk 168
deleting saved settings 73 single-sided printing 229
renaming saved settings 73 Smooth 168
processed jobs 230 spine
Product ID 164
Q
Quit 32
Fiery Command WorkStation 240
Index
T
Tab Stock 169
template
creating 70
Toolbar
customizing for 44
top binding with a cover 229
Traditional Laid 168
Translucent 167
Transparent 167
Tray and Paper Association 173
tray association 51
Two-Way Communication 206
Type Details 169
U
Ultra Smooth 168
Uncalendered 168
Units preference 24
US Basic Size 170
users
adding to existing group 34
changing privileges 36
deleting 37
removing from group 35
V
VDP File Search Paths
about 51
Vellum 168
Velvet 168
viewing
job properties 67
virtual printers
deleting 153
duplicating 153
editing 153
printing to 153, 154
publishing 153
setting up 151
viewing 153