Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2013/06/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]By the way, the silver print is no longer the top dog for archival B&W. Carbon is king. See the fade test data, below: (I'm not sure how the formatting will hold.) Aardenburg Imaging (http://www.aardenburg-imaging.com/) uses summary metrics that are probably not familiar to most. The "I* Color" measures the extent to which color has shifted. "I* Tone" measures only the Lab L (relative grayscale density) shift. Both of these are weighted to take into consideration human perceptual characteristics. The Delta-e, of course, is the familiar total color and tone (Lab A, B, and L) shift, not weighted by our visual perception characteristics. With the I* Color and I* Tone, the higher the score, the better. 100.0 is perceptually perfect. With Delta-e, the lower the better. Aardenburg Imaging fade test results at 50 MLux-hrs of exposure: I* Color I* Tone Delta-e Ilford Galerie FB Silver Average 90.9 98.8 1.4 Worst 71.7 97.9 3.2 50% test patch 94.8 1.0 Ilford FB selenium toned Average 92.5 98.8 1.2 Worst 75.5 97.4 2.8 50% test patch 96.2 0.9 "Eboni" 100% carbon on Premier Art 204 gsm paper Average 100.0 99.0 0.3 Worst 99.8 97.7 0.6 50% test patch 100.0 0.2 Note that this carbon ink sample is now at 120 Mlux-hrs, and the 50% test patch results are identical to what is shown, above, for 50 Mlux-hrs. (I am the proud inventor of this inkset.) Paul www.PaulRoark.com On Fri, Jun 7, 2013 at 5:39 AM, Chris Williams <zoeica at mac.com> wrote: > Europe gets all the cool kids. > > http://www.ilfordlab.com/ > ...