MFC-L9635CDN
FAQs & Troubleshooting |
Adjust colour settings by using the custom setting in the printer driver (Windows only)
You can adjust colour settings in the Custom Settings dialogue box of the Windows printer driver.
Please note that this feature is available in the Windows printer driver , not available in the BR-Script3 printer drivers of Windows.
NOTE: Illustrations shown below are from a representative product and operating system, and may differ from your Brother machine and operating system.
STEP 1: Check the current colour tone
Case A: The print is reddish.
Case B: The print is yellowish.
Case C: The print is pinkish.
Case D: The print is greenish.
Case E: The print is bluish.
Case F: The print is lightly bluish.
STEP 2: Adjust colour settings
-
Open the Custom Settings dialogue.
- Open Printing Preferences. (Click here to see the details of how to open Printing Preferences.)
- Click the Basic tab.
-
Choose Manual from the Document Type drop-down list.
(This step might be skipped in some models.)
-
Click Settings....
-
Click Settings....
-
Now, the Custom Settings dialogue box is open.
-
Adjust the colour settings with reference to the following table and the check result in STEP 1, and click OK.
NOTE:
Colours the machine can print and colours you see on a monitor are different. Computer monitors can display millions of colours as RGB (Red, Green, Blue). The colour laser machine uses a 4-colour printing process of CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black). The machine uses these 4 colours to create as many colours as possible, but may not be able to reproduce the colours on your monitor.
Additionally, what we see on a computer monitor is emitted light, while what we see on a printed document is reflected light. Due to this difference, we can't get a 100% accurate match. The nature of both types of light and how our eyes react, makes colour matching between them a bit of a challenge. Even LCD monitors are different from CRT monitors, as the brightness and contrast differ greatly.
The paper brightness and smoothness will affect the colours you see printed on the page. The colours you see on the page may look different in natural light, soft white light, and fluorescent light.
The images you printed in STEP 1 are ... Reference RGB value
Red
Green
Blue
reddish (Case A) -8
4
4
yellowish (Case B) -4
-4
8
pinkish (Case C) -4
8
-4
greenish (Case D) 4
-8
4
bluish (Case E) 4
4
-8
lightly bluish (Case F) 8
-4
-4
- If the print quality issue still remains, uncheck Improve Grey Colour in STEP 2-1.