Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/03/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I've been speculating. Actually, what I've been doing is playing with my i950, trying (with varying success) to get it to print B&W prints with predictible results, while reading lots of things about digital B&W printing on the 'net. It would appear that this is an area in which there is a terrible amount of confusion and very little science. Filling the void is speculation on everything ranging from tonality to longevity, plus a number of companies that sell various solutions. Most expensive, some probably very good. However... I've been thinking. Good quality inkjet printers are available today for less than $250. That's not a lot of money. I bought my i950 from B&H for that and it's a 6-ink, 2 picoliter inkjet printer. Piezography BW have apparently annouced that they are going to release an ink kit plus ICC profile for this printer. However, judging by the cost of similar products for the Epson line, it would appear that this alone is going to cost more than half the cost of the printer. So... I've been thinking. India ink is permanent. Good quality, "archival" paper is readily available. The i950 is blessed with not with separate ink wells, but also with a removable printer head. Together, these seem to suggest a solution. I'm guessing that it would be possible to dilute concentrated ink to reproducable dilutions. I'm also guessing that it would be possible to refill empty Canon ink wells with such diluted ink. Creating step wedges in Photoshop is easy. So, let's play a little game of thought. Imagine that we got some suitable ink. Imagine that we diluted this in six different dilutions, from one very black, through six levels of dilution, to one very light. Imagine that we filled empty ink wells with this, plugged them into a dedicated printer head and slapped the whole thing into an i950. Then, we fill our printer with some good quality, archival art paper of suitable weight. Now, imagine that we created a set of step wedges in Photoshop and printed these on, say, 8x10" or 8.5x11" paper. What we need to do now is somehow measure the density of the various patches of the step wedge. From this, we could create an ICC profile that would be plugged into Photoshop to allow on-screen, soft-proof editing of an image. Voila! Reproducable, pure ink, archival quality prints. Or am I wrong? Questions: * What kind of inks could you use? * What would you dilute them with? * How do you measure the density in the output? * Am I totally bonkers? M. - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html