Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/01/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There's another thing to consider here, and that's who the viewer is. The average viewer- not someone with darkroom experience, not a collector of 'fine art' photography - will look at today's high quality inkjet print and simply see it as a "photograph." Period. I have never had a client say, "hey, what's with the print?" Rather they say, "wow! Those are gorgeous prints." We tend to forget how far into the minutia our heads tend to be wedged.:-) On 1/16/06 1:43 AM, "feli" <feli2@earthlink.net> wrote: > On Jan 15, 2006, at 6:29 PM, Jonathan Borden wrote: >> feli wrote: >>> >>> It's not just a matter of skill, but also a matter of technical >>> limitations. With the exception of perhaps the Epson K3 inks, >>> there simply isn't a inkjet process out there (yet) that can >>> produce images with the same range as a wet, glossy fiber print. >>> But we are getting there. I'm guessing we will reach that point in >>> the next 5 years. > >> >> But you can readily measure the range of a print with a >> densitometer. The K3 blacks can readily get to 2.5. The range is >> then set by the whiteness of the paper. Silver gelatin generally >> prints 2.3 or less, so the range of the inkjet print is measurably >> at least the same, and generally measurably better. >> This in both cases is with glossy/semigloss papers -- matte papers >> give noticeably less dense blacks. >> If the issue is *range* we are there. >> Jonathan > > > > I think the K3 inks are a really big leap forward, but so far only > Epson has hit that mark and they are a fairly recent development. I > think it will take the other manufacturers a while to catch up. > > The way I understand it, the big reason why inkjet prints don't look > like silver prints, is because of the differences in how light reacts > to their respective surfaces. With an inkjet print the ink (image) > sits on top of the surface of the paper and the light reflects off of > it. With a fiber silver prints, the image is in the depth of the > paper. The light penetrates the surface and scatters below it. So, I > don't know if it will ever be possible for the two to look the same. > They are two different aesthetics based on two different technologies. > > feli > > > > > ________________________________________________________ > feli2@earthlink.net 2 + 2 = 4 > www.elanphotos.com > > > NO ARCHIVE > > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information