Quote:...I set the monitor profile and the ICC values for the printer and paper. The printer I use uses only sRGB.
That is sRGB images. Is this a 'home' printer or a printing service? The inks will be CMYK and the printer software provides the conversion.
The difference between sRGB (monitor display) and CMYK (printed colours) shown in the diagrams here
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_space You have fewer available colours with CMYK mostly the bright colours, blues & greens.
There is a lot of information here:
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/color-...inting.htm but it is a bit technical.
Quote:On some of my photos there are quite a bit of out-of-gamut sections. is there a fix for this? I've read that converting to CMYK and then back to sRGB will solve it, but I don't know how to do this in Gimp?
You can convert RGB -> CMYK -> RGB which will reduce the out of gamut colours shown in Gimp. This using a paper .icc profile and Krita for the intermediate conversion.
If you are using Gimp 2.8 (as stated) then the separate+ plugin works. ( I can fix you up with the appropriate files). If you move to Gimp 2.10 then separate+ does not work. There are on-line converters. If you can manage command line then ImageMagick works or use the freeware Krita. Big application just for conversion but that is what is available for free and better than separate+
Is it worth the bother?
What I do, I know the limitations of my computer monitor and software. The monitor has brightness turned down using the simple process here:
https://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutori...ration.htm
Even then, from experience I know the print will be on the dark side. I bump the image brightness up before printing. That gets me (mostly) what I see on the monitor = what the print looks like. Very much rule-of-thumb and all in the eye-of-the-beholder.